
TOKYO: Japan’s Nikkei share average slid for a second day on Wednesday, coming off of record highs, dragged lower by chip-related companies.
The Nikkei 225 Index lost 1.5% to 42,888.55 at the close. The broader Topix gauge fell 0.6%.
SoftBank Group plunged 7.1%, while Advantest , which makes chip-testing equipment, lost 5.7%.
The losses followed the tech-heavy Nasdaq sinking in U.S. trading overnight, with Nvidia sliding 3.5%, the biggest drop in nearly four months.
The U.S. government wants an equity stake in Intel in exchange for cash grants approved during the previous administration, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on Tuesday. That comes on the heels of SoftBank’s $2 billion investment in the struggling U.S. chipmaker that was announced on Monday.
“Concerns about government intervention in the semiconductor sector could weigh on U.S. high-tech stocks and, by extension, Japanese semiconductor-related shares,” said Nomura strategist Fumika Shimizu.
Documents memorializing trade agreements with Japan and South Korea are “weeks away” from being ready, Lutnick added.
Under the deal reached last month, the U.S. agreed to reduce tariffs on Japanese car imports to 15% from the previous 27.5%, and Japan promised $550 billion in U.S. investments.
The trade deal appears skewed to benefit Japan’s major exporters over companies that will make up the bulk of those investments in America, said Weston Nakamura, a markets analyst who publishes the Across the Spread newsletter.
“SoftBank, and whoever else invests in what the U.S. government deems as a strategic national interest, is ‘subsidizing’ the lower tariff rate for autos,” Nakamura added.
Automaker stocks were broadly higher, with Honda Motor rising 2% and Isuzu Motors adding 1.7%.
The Nikkei will likely ease off recent record highs toward year-end, according to strategists in a Reuters poll.
The index on Tuesday surpassed last week’s previous intraday record to touch 43,876.42. It is forecast to slip back to 42,000 at the end of December, according to the median estimate of 18 analysts polled August 8-18.
REUTERS