TOKYO — Japan’s stock market finished lower on Thursday, December 18, with the Nikkei 225 pulled down by heavyweight tech names as investors reassessed the near-term profitability of artificial intelligence and data-center spending. As of 5:00 a.m. EST (evening in Tokyo), the market is closed, and the day’s tone is clear: risk appetite cooled, and traders shifted into a more cautious stance ahead of a pivotal Bank of Japan policy decision on Friday. [1]
Market close: Nikkei under 50,000, tech does the damage
The Nikkei 225 fell 1.03% to 49,001.50, marking its lowest close since November 25 and ending the session at a three-week low. The broader Topix slipped 0.37% to 3,356.89, underscoring how the selloff was concentrated in the high-profile growth and tech names that dominate the Nikkei more than the wider market. [2]
Intraday, the Nikkei also touched a three-week low of 48,643.78, reflecting how persistent the selling pressure was as the session progressed. [3]
What drove Tokyo stocks lower: AI “profitability” doubts spill into Japan
The main storyline behind today’s Tokyo stock market move wasn’t a domestic earnings shock — it was the global tech mood, which has been rattled by mounting questions about whether AI-related investment can generate returns quickly enough to justify the scale of spending.
A key spark in the latest wave of “AI jitters” has been renewed concern around U.S. data-center financing and AI infrastructure buildouts, including headlines tied to Oracle and a major data-center project partner. That theme weighed on tech sentiment globally and fed into Japan’s tech-heavy trade. [4]
As one Tokyo-based strategist put it, investor concerns about the profitability of AI-related businesses and data centers have been coming to the surface — and Japan, which is also building out data-center capacity, is “not an exception.” [5]
Biggest drags: SoftBank, chip/testing names, and “AI plumbing” stocks
Several of the Nikkei’s most influential stocks moved sharply lower — and because the index is price-weighted, those declines hit harder than the broader market.
Key laggards included:
- SoftBank Group: down 3.76%, a notable drop for one of the market’s most watched AI-linked bellwethers [6]
- Advantest (chip-testing equipment): down 3.32% [7]
- Fujikura (fiber-optic cable/data-center exposure): down 3.42% [8]
SoftBank’s decline stood out because of its perceived linkage to the U.S. AI buildout narrative. Reuters-reported context carried by multiple outlets noted that SoftBank, along with Oracle and OpenAI, had previously announced plans tied to building data centers in the U.S. — which made it especially sensitive to any shift in the data-center/AI infrastructure outlook. [9]
The day’s broader market backdrop reinforced the theme: U.S. tech shares had recently been under pressure, and that spillover hit Asia during the Tokyo session. [10]
Banks and BOJ: rate-hike expectations add another headwind
Beyond tech, financials were also weaker, with traders positioning ahead of the Bank of Japan’s policy meeting conclusion on Friday. The market expectation, as reported by Reuters, is that the BOJ is widely seen as moving toward another increase — with many investors looking for signals not only on the rate decision itself, but on how quickly tightening could continue into 2026. [11]
In today’s Tokyo session:
- Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group fell about 1%
- Mizuho Financial Group slipped 0.92% [12]
Why does this matter for stocks? Because a BOJ hike can strengthen the yen and alter the domestic rate environment, shifting expectations for exporters, banks’ net interest margins, and overall risk sentiment — all at once.
In the currency market, Reuters reported the yen around 155.87 per dollar, with markets focused on central bank decisions in Japan, Europe, and the UK. [13]
Meanwhile, Japan’s bond market backdrop has become harder to ignore: Reuters-reported coverage noted the 10-year Japanese government bond yield rose to about 1.98%, the highest since 2007, ahead of the BOJ meeting — a reminder that rates expectations are active and consequential for portfolios. [14]
A rotation signal: “value” held up better than “growth”
One of the most telling under-the-surface details from today’s trade: the market’s style split favored value.
The Topix value share index fell only 0.13%, compared with a 0.63% decline in the Topix growth share index. In plain English, investors leaned away from pricier growth exposure (especially AI- and tech-adjacent names) and into relatively steadier value segments — a classic risk-off pattern when macro and global tech sentiment both wobble. [15]
Not all red: Shift and Keisei rise as investors hunt for defensives and idiosyncratic winners
Even on a down day, Tokyo markets still produced notable gainers — especially in names less directly tied to the global AI and rate narrative.
- Shift (software testing) jumped 5.09%, the Nikkei’s top percentage gainer
- Keisei Electric Railway rose 4.57% [16]
Moves like these often reflect a mix of stock-specific demand and a broader tilt toward areas perceived as more defensive or less exposed to global tech volatility.
Autos in focus: Honda dips amid chip-shortage headlines
Outside tech and banks, autos drew attention after fresh production-related news.
Japan-focused outlets reported that Honda plans to reduce vehicle production at some plants in Japan and China from late December through early January due to a semiconductor shortage, including temporary suspensions at specific Japan plants in early January. [17]
In market action, global wire coverage noted Honda shares fell in Tokyo trading as the headlines circulated. [18]
Capital flows: foreign investors step up Japan exposure ahead of the BOJ
A separate, market-relevant datapoint that landed on December 18: Japan’s Ministry of Finance flow data showed foreign investors significantly increased purchases of Japanese long-term bonds in the week ending Dec. 13.
According to Reuters-reported figures, foreigners bought a net 1.41 trillion yen (about $9.05 billion) of Japanese long-term bonds — the biggest weekly inflow since April — and also added 528.3 billion yen of Japanese stocks (a third straight week of net equity buying). [19]
That matters for Friday and beyond because it suggests global investors are actively positioning around Japan’s policy trajectory — not stepping away from Japan entirely, but rebalancing where they want risk (and duration) ahead of the BOJ.
What investors are watching next
With Thursday’s session in the books, Tokyo market attention now shifts to a tight cluster of catalysts:
1) Bank of Japan decision (Friday, Tokyo time)
Markets are focused on whether the BOJ hikes and how Governor Kazuo Ueda frames the path ahead — particularly the pace of tightening into 2026. [20]
2) The yen’s reaction
The yen’s direction matters for exporters and equity sentiment broadly. A sharper yen move can quickly change leadership inside the Nikkei. [21]
3) Global tech sentiment and U.S. inflation data
AI spending concerns have been the dominant mood driver, and markets are also watching U.S. inflation data as investors try to map the next phase of global monetary policy divergence. [22]
Bottom line: The Tokyo stock market today told a focused story: AI-linked heavyweight selling dragged the Nikkei to a three-week low, while BOJ uncertainty pressured banks and encouraged a rotation away from growth. With Japan’s central bank decision looming, the next session’s direction may depend less on “today’s dip” and more on how traders interpret the BOJ’s next move — and what it means for the yen, yields, and global risk appetite. [23]
References
1. m.economictimes.com, 2. m.economictimes.com, 3. m.economictimes.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. m.economictimes.com, 6. m.economictimes.com, 7. m.economictimes.com, 8. m.economictimes.com, 9. m.economictimes.com, 10. m.economictimes.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. m.economictimes.com, 13. www.reuters.com, 14. m.economictimes.com, 15. m.economictimes.com, 16. m.economictimes.com, 17. www.nippon.com, 18. apnews.com, 19. m.economictimes.com, 20. m.economictimes.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.reuters.com, 23. m.economictimes.com


