Japan`s Nikkei closes above 68,000 mark as AI stocks surge
Wednesday, June 03, 2026       14:33 WIB

Published on 06/03/2026 at 03:05 am EDT
(Reuters) - Japan's Nikkei closed above 68,000 for the first time on Wednesday, just two days after breaching 67,000, as a rally in AI-related stocks outweighed concerns over the Middle East.
The Nikkei climbed 2.5% to close at 68,402.13. The broader Topix earlier surpassed the 4,000 mark for the first time before closing 1.8% higher at 3,996.2.
Shares of Kioxia Holdings rose 7.2% to top the 80,000-yen level for the first time after the memory-card maker said it will start paying dividends from fiscal 2027, helped by strong earnings. It also briefly overtook Toyota Motor as Japan's second-most valuable firm, according to the Nikkei newspaper.
Chip-making equipment maker Tokyo Electron climbed 13.4% to a record-closing high, providing the biggest boost to the Nikkei by adding 723 points. Shares of semiconductor testing equipment maker Advantest, up 5.1%, lifted the blue-chip index by 323 points.
"Following the overnight lead from Wall Street and several additional positive catalysts, semiconductor and AI-related shares are once again among the biggest gainers today," said Maki Sawada, an equities strategist at Nomura Securities. "Gains in AI-linked shares, supported by robust demand expectations, continue to underpin the rally."
There were 164 advancers in the Nikkei index against 60 decliners.
Semiconductor equipment maker Screen Holdings was the top gainer in the index, surging 17.9% to a record closing high, while camera and precision optics maker Nikon jumped nearly 10%.
On the downside, software testing provider SHIFT fell 12.2%, leading declines, while film studio and theater operator Toho slipped 4.1%.
Among the Tokyo Stock Exchange's 33 industry groups, 25 climbed, led by a 5.7% jump in nonferrous metals.
The telecommunications sector was the worst performer, falling nearly 2%.
Oil prices, meanwhile, rose about 1% after hostilities in the Middle East escalated, with Iran firing missiles at Kuwait and Bahrain, while diplomatic talks with the United States showed little progress.
(Reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips)

Sumber : Reuters