SYDNEY, March 27 (Reuters) - Japan's share benchmark Nikkei
rebounded on Friday and logged its biggest weekly gain on record
as policymakers around the world launched a raft of stimulus
efforts to mitigate the economic damage from the coronavirus.
The Nikkei average .N225 rose 3.9% to 19,389.43 points,
recouping most of the 4.5% losses suffered on Thursday. The
index jumped more than 200 points in the final minute of trade
on passive investors' buying to reinvest expected dividend
payments.
For the week, the index surged 17.1%, but it is still down
18% for the year after the explosive spread of the virus
triggered a global economic crisis and a meltdown in financial
markets.
The Nikkei's volatility index .JNIV , a measure of
investors' volatility expectations based on option pricing and
considered to be a fear gauge, fell 3.2% to 52.47, moving
further away from a nine-year peak of 60.86 hit on March 16.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is expected to order his cabinet
to compile an economic package with spending worth $135 billion
or more, government officials and lawmakers say.
Wall Street's main indexes surged about 6% on Thursday as
record weekly U.S. jobless claims came in below investors' worst
fears and the focus stayed on an unprecedented $2 trillion
stimulus package. .N
The staggering spike of 3.28 million in U.S. jobless claims
led Fed Chair Jerome Powell to promise the bank would lend
"aggressively" to cushion the impact of the coronavirus.
The broader Topix .TOPX advanced 4.3% to 1,459.49, also
helped by massive buying by passive investors.
All but one of the 33 sector sub-indexes on the Tokyo Stock
Exchange were higher, with more defensive electric and gas
.IEPNG.T and pharmaceutical .IPHAM.T being among the top
three performing sectors.
Semiconductor-related companies were in demand, with Tokyo
Electron Ltd 8035.T jumped 5.1% and Shin-Etsu Chemical Co Ltd
4063.T soared 6.1% after U.S. chipmaker Micron Technology Inc
MU.O forecast current-quarter revenue above analysts'
estimates. As Tokyo moves closer toward a potential citywide lockdown
over the coronavirus pandemic, shares of food makers and
drugstores were also sought after.
Nichirei Corp 2871.T climbed 7.2%, Nissin Foods Holdings
Co Ltd 2897.T gained 6.6% and Ajinomoto Co Inc 2802.T rose
5.8%, while MatsumotoKiyoshi Holdings Co Ltd 3088.T surged
7.5%.
"Japan and the rest of Asia look likely to get their
economies back on their feet way before the U.S. and Europe,"
said Nicholas Smith, Japan strategist at CLSA Securities.
"If you think Japan and the rest of Asia will recover first
what do you buy? Japanese stocks that are most exposed to
China."
Indeed, Shiseido Co Ltd 4911.T advanced 5.1% and Unicharm
Corp 8113.T gained 4.0% on Friday.
Bucking the overall trend, the TSE REIT index .TREIT shed
2.5% as investots booked profits after a recent rally.
Elsewhere, the Nikkei's heavyweight SoftBank Group 9984.T
added 2.9%, a day after slumping 9.4% on Moody's downgrade.