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Japan Investors Make Biggest Foreign Stock Exit in 5Y in May

June 8 (Reuters) - Japanese investors sold foreign stocks at the fastest pace in about five years in May, as caution over Middle ​East hostilities and concerns that a tech-driven market rally ‌had run too far weighed on sentiment.

They sold foreign stocks of a net 2.72 trillion yen ($16.98 billion) during the month as they ​logged the largest net withdrawal since April 2021, data ​from Japan's Ministry of Finance (MOF) showed on Monday.

The MSCI ⁠World Index, which hit a record 1,138.3 last week, ​is down about 2.9% so far this month, as a ​blowout U.S. jobs report triggered a selloff in hot AI-linked technology stocks.

Japanese investors bought a net 2.9 trillion yen worth of foreign debt securities, the ​most since May 2025.

The MOF data showed that trust ​accounts divested a net 3.38 trillion yen of foreign stocks but pumped ‌3.16 ⁠trillion yen into bonds in the overseas markets.

Investment trust management companies and life insurers, meanwhile, bought a net 614.6 billion yen and 77.5 billion yen worth of foreign stocks in ​the last month.

A ​separate set ⁠of data from the Bank of Japan showed that Japanese investors had bought 1.91 trillion yen ​worth of U.S. stocks and 826.4 billion ​yen of ⁠European stocks in the first four months of this year.

They had bought British and Spanish stocks of 285.5 billion yen ⁠and 80.1 ​billion yen in the first four ​months of the year.

($1 = 160.2000 yen)

Reporting by Gaurav Dogra; Editing by Andrew Heavens

Source: Reuters


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