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Foreign Investors Pour $18.65B into Japanese Stocks on Return after 3 wks

April 9 (Reuters) - Japanese stocks witnessed a huge influx of foreign funds in the week through April 4, a turnaround from ​three successive weeks of selling, with investor sentiment ‌stabilizing ahead of a ceasefire in the Iran war.

Foreigners invested a net 2.96 trillion yen ($18.65 billion) into Japanese stocks in the week, ​reversing nearly two-thirds of the 4.45 trillion yen withdrawals ​the prior week, data from Japan's Ministry of ⁠Finance showed on Thursday.

The Nikkei rallied roughly 5.39% on ​Wednesday as the U.S. and Iran reached a ceasefire deal the ​day before.

Seasonal factors also contributed to foreign inflows in the last week.

Foreign financial institutions often shift their holdings from Tokyo to offshore entities ​in March, before the voting rights and dividend entitlements ​are fixed, and then move them back in April, said Tomochika Kitaoka, ‌the ⁠chief equity strategist for Japan at Nomura.

Foreigners had shed nearly 7.37 trillion yen worth of Japanese stocks in March.

A surge in benchmark Japanese government bond yields to a near three-decade ​high also helped ​attract 2.46 ⁠trillion yen in foreign inflows into local long-term bonds last week.

Japanese investors, meanwhile, pumped roughly ​1.44 trillion yen - the largest amount in 11 ​months - ⁠into foreign stocks in the period.

They, however, divested foreign long-term bonds by a net 2.46 trillion yen, as they remained ⁠net ​sellers for a fourth successive week.

($1 = ​158.7000 yen)

Reporting by Gaurav Dogra;

Source: Reuters


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