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Japan Sells Foreign Stocks in April as Energy Costs Rise

May 13 (Reuters) - Japanese investors turned net sellers of foreign stocks for the first time in four months in April, ​as concerns over higher energy costs from the ‌Iran war and the risk of broader inflation prompted caution on overseas equities.

They divested a net 636.4 billion yen ($4.04 billion) of ​foreign stocks last month, logging the largest monthly ​net sales since October 2025, data from the ⁠Ministry of Finance showed on Wednesday.

Japanese selloff in foreign ​bonds, however, eased to a three-month low of 219.2 billion ​yen in April.

U.S. consumer inflation gained at the fastest pace in three years in April as prices rose across food, services, rental and ​airline costs, data from the U.S. Labor Department showed ​on Tuesday.

Japanese trust accounts withdrew 1.85 trillion yen from foreign stocks in ‌the ⁠biggest monthly net pullout since June 2025, but invested to the tune of 897.3 billion yen in foreign long-term bonds.

Investment trust management companies and life insurers were, however, net ​buyers of 1.25 ​trillion yen ⁠and 333.1 billion yen worth of foreign stocks.

A separate report from the Bank of ​Japan showed that Japanese investors had sold U.S. ​bonds ⁠of 4.95 trillion yen and European bonds of 1.02 trillion yen in the first quarter.

They had sold French and German ⁠bonds ​of 797.66 billion yen and 307.65 ​billion yen, respectively.

($1 = 157.7000 yen)

Reporting by Gaurav Dogra; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair

Source: Reuters


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