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12 November 2025
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Japan Stocks Today (Nov 13, 2025): Dow’s Record High, Yen Near 155, Producer Prices at 8:50 JST, and SoftBank/Sony in Focus — What to Know Before Tokyo Opens

Summary: Tokyo opens Thursday with bullish global cues from Wall Street’s fresh Dow record, a softer yen hovering around the politically sensitive 155 level, and Japan’s October producer prices due at 8:50 JST. Watch SoftBank, Sony, Toyota and trading houses after a run of headline‑making announcements, plus the 5‑year JGB auction at midday.


Where markets stand before the bell

  • Nikkei 225 last close (Wed, Nov 12): 51,063.31. The benchmark added modestly on Wednesday, with the close confirmed by Nikkei’s official archive.
  • Nikkei futures tone: Yen‑denominated CME Nikkei November futures were last around 51,200 in late U.S. hours (about +0.2%), hinting at a steady-to-firmer open in Tokyo.
  • USD/JPY: The yen weakened as far as 154.79 on Wednesday; traders are openly talking about 155 as a “line in the sand,” reviving intervention chatter. Bloomberg+1

Global lead‑in: Wall Street, Europe, oil and gold

  • Wall Street: The Dow Jones closed above 48,000 for the first time (48,254.82, +0.7%), while the Nasdaq slipped and the S&P 500 was little changed. Optimism that the U.S. government shutdown is about to end outweighed weakness in big tech; AMD jumped on aggressive AI targets.
  • Shutdown watch: The U.S. House reconvened for a vote late Wednesday (U.S. time) to send a Senate‑passed funding bill to the President, who signaled he would sign it—a key sentiment boost for risk assets.
  • Europe: The STOXX 600 and FTSE 100 both notched record closes as shutdown relief and rate‑cut hopes buoyed financials and utilities—extending the risk‑on hand‑off to Asia.
  • Commodities:Brent hovered near $65 and WTI near $61 on Wednesday; gold eased after touching a near three‑week high as traders weighed a softer dollar and December Fed‑cut odds.
  • U.S. rates: The 10‑year Treasury yield drifted lower into the close (around 4.07%), a supportive backdrop for equities sensitive to duration.

Why it matters for Tokyo: A weaker yen alongside firm U.S./Europe closes typically favors exporters and cyclicals; lower U.S. yields and climbing European financials may keep Japan bank shares bid at the open.


Japan’s macro diary: what hits this morning

  • 08:50 JST — Producer Prices (CGPI, Oct): Consensus has wholesale inflation easing to ~2.5% y/y; a surprise could nudge rate expectations for the Dec 19 BOJ meeting.
  • 08:50 JST — Weekly portfolio flows: The MOF’s securities flow data lands ahead of the lunch break.
  • 12:35 JST — 5‑year JGB auction results: About ¥2.4tn on offer; a smooth sale would help steady local yields after super‑long supply jitters earlier this year.

Context: PM Sanae Takaichi reiterated she wants wage‑driven (not cost‑push) inflation and is preparing a stimulus that leans into growth sectors—signals that monetary tightening will remain measured even as the yen stays weak.


Yen watch: intervention nerves are back

Finance officials have issued fresh warnings as USD/JPY approaches 155, a zone that previously preceded action. While fundamentals argue against imminent intervention, a sharp overshoot could still trigger it. Traders should expect headline sensitivity around 154–157.


Corporate storylines likely to move stocks

  • SoftBank Group (9984): Shares slid after reports it exited its Nvidia stake to bankroll more than $30bn in AI bets, even as Q2 net profit surged on Vision Fund valuation gains. Expect volatility as investors weigh a riskier AI tilt against hefty paper gains.
  • Sony Group (6758):Raised FY operating‑profit guidance to ¥1.43tn (+8%) and announced a buyback; strength in entertainment and chips offset tariff headwinds. Sentiment tailwind likely persists.
  • Toyota (7203):Opened its North Carolina battery plant and mapped up to $10bn of U.S. investment over five years—read‑through for Toyota’s hybrid push and North American strategy.
  • Mitsui & Co. (8031): Signed a 20‑year LNG SPA with Venture Global for 1 mtpa starting 2029; reinforces trading houses’ energy optionality as data‑center power demand climbs.

Sectors to watch at the open

  • Semiconductors / AI complex:AMD’s surge on ambitious AI revenue targets can buoy Tokyo Electron, Advantest, and chip supply chain names tied to data‑center spending. Keep an eye on profit‑taking after recent strength.
  • Banks: With European financials leading and domestic rate normalization still on the table, Japan’s megabanks (MUFG, SMFG, Mizuho) stay in focus after upbeat profit trajectories.
  • Energy & trading houses: The Mitsui–Venture Global LNG deal underscores long‑duration supply security and could ripple across the sōgō shōsha cohort.
  • Exporters: A 154–155 dollar‑yen helps autos and machinery; watch for any verbal intervention that could abruptly flip the FX tailwind.

The immediate setup for Thursday, Nov 13 (JST)

  • Tone: Constructive. Nikkei futures point to a stable/firmer start; USD/JPY near 155 adds to exporter support.
  • Key prints:CGPI at 08:50—a downside surprise would cool BOJ‑hike chatter; upside risks would do the opposite.
  • Watchlist: SoftBank (positioning after earnings/Nvidia exit), Sony (guidance bump follow‑through), Toyota (U.S. battery news), Mitsui (LNG contract), banks (global financials bid).

One more macro note

The Reuters Tankan shows manufacturers’ sentiment at a near four‑year high in November, powered by electronics and autos—an important counterweight to tariff and growth concerns ahead of Q3 GDP on Nov 17.


Bottom line

Incoming Tokyo flows should start on the front foot thanks to the Dow’s fresh record, a still‑weak yen and a clean macro calendar catalyst at 8:50 JST. Keep FX headlines on your screen—155 in USD/JPY is the market’s tripwire—and watch SoftBank/Sony/Toyota/Mitsui for stock‑specific momentum into the first hour.


This article is for information only and does not constitute investment advice.

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