TOKYO, Feb 19 (Reuters) - Japan's Nikkei share average
slipped on Friday, falling back below the 30,000 mark it has
recovered for the first time in three decades earlier this week,
as profit-taking ahead of the weekend trumped broad economic
recovery optimism.
The Nikkei .N225 lost 0.95% to 29,947.42 .N225 , moving
further away from its 30-1/2-year high of 30,714.52 touched on
Monday. The broader Topix .TOPX shed 0.76% to 1,927.21.
"Since the rally had been quite fast, we are having a bit of
correction," said Hideyuki Ishiguro, a senior strategist at
Daiwa Securities, adding that the Nikkei's drop was in line with
falls in global stocks.
Fast Retailing 9983.T , which has the highest weighting in
the Nikkei, fell 2.7%, reversing early gains as investors took
profits from its rise of almost 10% this week.
Strong gains in Fast Retailing and a few other Nikkei
heavyweights such as SoftBank Group 9984.T have boosted the
Nikkei more than the broader Topix, lifting the NT ratio
.NTIDX to a record 15.60 earlier in the day.
"It's true that Fast Retailing's earnings were pretty strong
but you could say that's all priced in, with its extremely high
valuations," said Fumio Matsumoto, chief strategist at Okasan
Securities.
Some travel-related shares also slipped after gains earlier
this week following the start of the country's COVID-19
vaccination programme.
ANA Holdings 9202.T fell 2.7%, while Japan Airlines
9201.T lost 3.3%. Central Japan Railway 9022.T lost 2.4%.
Some other cyclical sectors also led the decline, with
securities brokerages .ISECU.T falling 2% and carmakers
.ITEQP.T losing 1.3%.
But some tech names bucked the trend, with capacitor maker
Taiyo Yuden 6976.T gaining 2.7%.
Toyota Boshoku 3116.T rose 1.1% after the company said
Toyota Motor 7203.T had sold a portion of its stake in the
firm, a move that is intended to increase free-floating shares
and enables the firm to be listed in the top-tier segment of the
Tokyo bourse in an upcoming board reshuffle in 2022.