TOKYO, March 4 (Reuters) - Japanese shares rose modestly on
Tuesday, tracking a pickup in Wall Street futures as early U.S.
Democratic primary results dribbled in, although the gains were
limited by broader risk aversion as a Federal Reserve rate cut
failed to soothe nerves.
Supporting U.S. stock futures was a resurgent former U.S.
Vice President Joe Biden in the Democrats' "Super Tuesday"
primaries over chief rival Senator Bernie Sanders, who is seen
as being tougher on big business.
After a volatile session, the Nikkei share average .N225
rose 0.35% to 21,156.99 by midday while the broader Topix
.TOPX gained 0.11% to 1,506.71, briefly touching a six-month
low. Both indexes stood not far from six-month lows.
More than one-third of the delegates who pick the eventual
nominee at a July convention are up for grabs in primary
elections in 14 states on Tuesday, which could provide some
clarity in a muddled race for the White House. Still, the market mood was grim as the spread of coronavirus
both in Japan and globally looks set to hit companies' bottom
lines well beyond the current quarter.
"A Fed rate cut had been already priced in. And in a sense
the hasty move gave you the impression that the Fed's ammunition
is quickly dwindling," said Hiroyuki Ueno, senior strategist at
Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Asset Management.
"And the fundamental problem is we are dealing with a virus,
which does not care about interest rates," he said.
Banks were the biggest losers as falls in U.S. bond yields
to record low look set to shrink their income further at a time
negative domestic interest rates are hurting their profits.
Bank index .IBNKS.T fell 1.7%, with MUFG 8306.T falling
2.0%, SMFG 8316.T losing 1.6% and Mizuho 8411.T shedding
1.5%.
Insurers, who also increasingly rely on foreign bonds for
income, also suffered. The insurer index .IINSU.T fell 0.6%.
Meanwhile, many exporters were bruised by a rise in the yen,
which hit a five month high of 106.85 per dollar JPY= on
Wednesday following the Fed's rate cut. FRX/
Shin-Etsu Chemical 4063.T fell 2.8% while Fanuc 6954.T
lost 1.3%. Toyota Motor 7203.T dropped 0.6%.
Telecom companies did better as the coronavirus shifted many
businesses to remote work situations, boosting demand for
communications systems. KDDI 9433.T rose 5.1% while NTT Docomo
9437.T gained 3.3%.
(Editing by Sam Holmes)