Tokyo, March 1, 2026, 14:59 JST — The market has closed.
- Japan Exchange Group wrapped up Friday at 2,135.5 yen, climbing 3.5% and hovering close to its 52-week peak.
- With Tokyo inflation coming in softer, traders are reassessing BOJ rate-hike bets and watching the yen closely for signs of intervention or pushback from authorities.
- Investors are eyeing two key events: Japan will auction 10-year government bonds on March 3, while the U.S. jobs report lands March 6.
Japan Exchange Group (JPX) finished Friday at 2,135.5 yen, up 3.51%. Shares hovered close to the 52-week peak as the Tokyo exchange closed out February and paused for the weekend. JPX moved between 2,080 and 2,139 yen, with volume clocking in at 6,842,100 shares, according to Reuters data. Reuters Japan
Investors see the draw clearly enough. JPX runs an exchange, so its top line shifts along with trading volumes—whether in stocks or derivatives. Swings in the market typically mean more churn, and that’s where JPX pulls in revenue.
The link’s become more important, with Japan balancing two key forces driving turnover: cooling inflation on one hand, and on the other, a currency that’s under close official scrutiny.
Core consumer inflation in Tokyo edged down to 1.8% in February, dipping under the Bank of Japan’s 2% target for the first time since October 2024, according to a government release. Another key indicator — which cuts out both fresh food and fuel — climbed 2.5%, marking it as a signal of deeper price trends. “I don’t think this result alone would affect the Bank of Japan’s stance of keeping to its commitment to raise interest rates,” said Kanako Nakamura, economist at Daiwa Institute of Research. Reuters
Currency chatter isn’t letting up. Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama told parliament the yen’s decline is being monitored “with a strong sense of urgency,” stressing that Tokyo remains in “extremely close communication” with the United States. Reuters
Some exchange tidying cropped up as month-end neared. Tokyo Stock Exchange on Friday added Vitabrid Japan and ReqMed to the Growth market’s updated new listings calendar, both set for April 2, the JPX website shows. JPX
Stocks held up through the finish. Japan’s Nikkei closed out Friday with a 0.16% gain at 58,850.27, according to Reuters market data. Reuters
Rates take center stage this week as Japan’s Ministry of Finance lines up a 10-year JGB auction on March 3. The ministry plans to offer roughly 2.6 trillion yen, per its latest issuance notice. Ministry of Finance Japan
Next up: the world tunes in for the global readout. The U.S. Employment Situation report for February lands March 6 at 8:30 a.m. ET, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That release has a reputation for shaking up bond yields and currencies, sometimes rippling right into Tokyo’s open. Bureau of Labor Statistics
The real focus sits with the BOJ. Its next policy decision is slated for March 18–19, as listed on the official calendar, and traders are sifting through data and speeches for clues about when a shift might happen. Bank of Japan
The JPX rally’s got a straightforward risk—let volatility drop off, and that fee boost disappears just as fast. On Friday, global equities gave up ground, pressured by valuation jitters and renewed anxiety over artificial intelligence shaking up segments of tech. A sharp signal that market mood can reverse in a heartbeat. Reuters
JPX shares face Monday’s open with traders weighing if the new month sparks another round of rotation, or if the tape just drifts. Eyes turn next to Tuesday’s 10-year JGB auction (March 3), then Friday’s U.S. payrolls drop (March 6).