Tokyo - Tokyo shares rose on Wednesday morning, shaking off a fall on Wall Street, as a drop in the yen boosted the profit outlook for Japan's exporters.
The currency has been falling against the dollar following solid US manufacturing data and comments by Federal Reserve officials suggesting that an interest rate hike was still on the cards for this year.
"A December rate hike seems almost certain, and it sounds like that may be followed by two more rate hikes next year instead of one," said Chihiro Ohta, a Tokyo-based senior strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities.
"The yen's weakness against the dollar, triggered by mounting US rate hike expectations, is good for Japanese stocks as it alleviates concern over how far the recent strength in the yen will go," he told Bloomberg News.
A strong yen is negative for Japanese exporters as it makes them less competitive abroad and eats into repatriated profits.
The benchmark Nikkei 225 index added 94.57 points, to 16 830.22 by the break, while the broader Topix index of all first-section issues was up 8.29 points, at 1 348.50.
In Tokyo stocks trade, Yamaha Motor jumped 4.05% to ¥2 153 while Honda gained 2.46% to ¥3 060 after reports that the two motorcycle giants are in talks over joining up their scooter divisions.
Brewer Asahi Group Holdings fell 0.81% to ¥3 768 following reports that it planned to offer SABMiller ¥500bn ($4.9bn) to purchase the British group's beer operations in five eastern European countries.
Sompo Holdings rose 2.05% to ¥3 032 after the Nikkei business daily reported a unit of the insurer is close to inking a $6.5bn deal to buy property and casualty insurance provider Endurance Specialty Holdings, a Bermuda-based firm with a strong US market presence.
In forex markets, the dollar fetched ¥102.89 against ¥102.88 in New York on Tuesday.
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