Nikkei open higher with eyes on earnings, US jobs data



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Pedestrians walk past an electronic stock board outside a securities firm in Tokyo. (Bloomberg pic)

TOKYO: Tokyo stocks opened higher on Friday extending rallies in New York, as investors watched corporate earnings reports and awaited key US jobs data.

The benchmark Nikkei 225 index was up 0.39% or 83.95 points at 21,771.60 while the broader Topix index was up 0.23% or 3.17 points at 1,635.76.

“Tokyo share trading in early hours is seen dominated by purchases, helped by a tailwind from gains in US shares,” Okasan Online Securities said in a commentary.

“The market sentiment is not bad, as shares with good corporate results are rising,” it noted.

The dollar fetched 112.80 yen in early Asian trade, against 112.62 yen in New York late Thursday.

NTT Docomo rebounded by 3.33% to 2,507 yen after a 14.71% dip in the previous session following its announcement that it would cut fees under government pressure.

Its rival KDDI was up 3.64% at 2,446 yen after it reported six-months to September results in line with market expectations.

It also confirmed a tie-up with online retailer Rakuten.

Japan Airlines was down 0.68% at 3,920 yen after news its pilot was arrested before a flight for being drunk and almost 20 times the legal alcohol limit for a pilot.

Its rival All Nippon Airways was unchanged at 3,735 yen.

Suzuki Motor plummeted 7.60% to 5,214 yen after it reported 136.18 billion yen net profit for the six months to September and disappointed investors with lower-than-expected second quarter operating profit.

Market heavyweight and Uniqlo casual wear operator Fast Retailing was up 1.43% at 58,850 yen.



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