Japan's Nikkei share average sank on Friday, tracking declines on Wall Street after robust U.S. economic data stoked bets that stubborn inflation may delay Federal Reserve interest rate cuts.
The Nikkei sagged 1.17% to 38,646.11 as of the close, and had earlier dipped as much as 1.9%.
The broader Topix dropped 0.44%.
All three main U.S. equity indexes declined overnight, led by a 1.5% slump for the Dow, after U.S. manufacturers reported a surge in prices for a range of inputs, suggesting that goods inflation could pick up in the months ahead.
The benchmark U.S. 10-year bond yield climbed to a more than one-week peak of 4.498% as traders pared back bets to a likely single quarter-point rate reduction this year, from a consensus for two cuts previously.
«It definitely seems, at least in the short term, that moves in Japanese stock prices are in the hands of U.S. yield levels,» Kazuo Kamitani, an equities strategist at Nomura Securities said.
While the Nikkei was firmly down on the day, the strategist pointed to support from 25-day moving average at around 38,300 as holding firm. And with the indicator turning slightly upward as of the close of Friday's trading, «the Nikkei could potentially hold at current levels or even flip to gains from next week», he said.
For the week, the Nikkei has lost 0.36%, but remains up more than 15% this year, keeping it squarely among the top performing markets globally.
It rose to an all-time high of 41,087.75 on March 22 before pulling back over the following month to as low as