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Japan’s Nikkei rises past 58,000 for first time on Takaichi trade

By Thomson Reuters Feb 11, 2026 | 6:39 PM

By Rocky Swift

TOKYO, Feb 12 (Reuters) – Japan’s Nikkei share average climbed past the 58,000 mark for the first time on Thursday, extending its scorching rally since Prime Minister ​Sanae Takaichi won a resounding electoral victory on a ‌campaign of increased economic stimulus.

The benchmark Nikkei 225 Index was up 0.4% at 57,874.61 after rising as high as 58,015.08 earlier in the day, as trading resumed after a holiday. So far in 2026, the Nikkei has surged ‌15%. ​The broader Topix climbed 0.8% to ⁠3,884.16 on Thursday.

The earnings season ⁠is underway in the world’s fourth-largest economy, and domestic markets have been buoyed by bets that a decisive showing by Takaichi’s Liberal Democratic Party in Sunday’s national election will enable ​her to push through spending and tax-relief measures.

Since she began her rise to become the nation’s first female premier in October, ⁠the “Takaichi trade” has pushed local shares ⁠to successive record highs while spurring declines in ​government bonds and the yen.

“Following recent strong earnings results and the ​LDP’s landslide victory under the Takaichi administration, the market has ‌been on a significant upward trend,” said Wataru Akiyama, a strategist at Nomura Securities.

“The sense of overheating seems to be intensifying, so profit-taking movements could emerge from here on.”

Honda Motor shares slumped ⁠3% after the automaker posted a 61% drop in third-quarter profit after market hours on Tuesday.

Results from SoftBank Group after the bell on ⁠Thursday will be closely ‌watched for details on how it will ⁠fund its massive investments in AI.

There were 148 ​advancers on ‌the Nikkei against 74 decliners. The largest ​gainers in the ⁠index were cosmetics maker Shiseido, up 14%, followed by Mitsui Kinzoku, a key supplier in the AI sector, which climbed 11%.

The largest losers were Sharp, which sank 11%, followed by consulting services provider Baycurrent, down 8.6%.

(Reporting by Rocky Swift in Tokyo; Editing by Christian ​Schmollinger and Subhranshu Sahu)