Tokyo shares close lower, eyes on G20

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TOKYO: Tokyo stocks slipped Friday with focus turning to a weekend G20 finance ministers’ meeting, but Toshiba rebounded on reports the government may help fund the embattled firm’s turnaround.

Automakers dragged the main indexes down as investors retreated to the sidelines ahead of a long holiday weekend.

Markets are also awaiting news from the G20 gathering in Germany that

brings together finance ministers from the world’s most powerful economies, as worries grow over the isolationist slant of US President Donald Trump’s “America First” policy.

A meeting in Washington between Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, scheduled for later Friday, was also attracting global attention.

“The upside looks tough with uncertainty ahead of the G20 meeting,” Nobuhiko Kuramochi, head of investment information at Mizuho Securities, told Bloomberg News.

“The US may raise issues relating to the dollar, border taxes and global trade, which could push the yen higher,” he said.

The dollar bought 113.33 yen, slightly up from 113.26 yen Thursday.

Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 fell 0.35 percent, or 68.55 points, to end the session 19,521.59. The benchmark index slipped 0.42 percent over the week.

The Topix index of all first-section issues was down 0.43 percent, or 6.84 points, to end at 1,565.85, posting a 0.52 percent weekly loss.

On Wall Street the Dow and S&P 500 both retreated on disappointment with Trump’s controversial budget proposal, which was filled with big defence spending and cuts to education and environmental projects.

However, it lacked any detail on his pledge to slash taxes and ramp up infrastructure spending.

Tokyo investors are also cautious as Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe grapples with a brewing controversy over his connections to a school that promotes an extreme right ideology.

It is a rare whiff of scandal for the conservative leader who swept to power in late 2012.

Toyota fell 1.17 percent to 6,377 yen, while Nissan slipped 0.48 percent to close at 1,132 yen.

Toshiba jumped 3.54 percent to 190.1 yen on reports that Tokyo is mulling using state money to support the loss-hit company’s plans to spin off its prized memory chip business. The government denied the reports.

Nintendo rose 1.68 percent to 25,580 yen after reports said the firm would at least double planned production of its new Switch console in the coming year owing to strong demand.

Japanese financial markets are closed Monday for a public holiday.