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Nikkei Enters Correction on Tech Selloff, Mideast Conflict

TOKYO, July 17 (Reuters) - Japan's Nikkei tumbled into correction territory on Friday, as a global rout ​in chipmakers and an escalation in the Middle East conflict prompted investors to ‌shun risk assets.

The benchmark Nikkei 225 sank 4.03% to close lower at 64,141.12, after falling as much as 6.18%. The index is now down 11.3% from its all-time high close of 72,366.34 on June 25. The ​broader Topix slipped 2.72% to 3,919.21.

The decline followed overnight losses in U.S. equities, where technology ​stocks tumbled, while U.S. economic data showed strength and corporate earnings season was ⁠robust. Hawkish remarks from Federal Reserve officials on Thursday reinforced expectations for further U.S. rate ​hikes.

The Philadelphia SE Semiconductor index tumbled 4.3% overnight, while the U.S.-listed shares of South Korean chipmaker ​SK Hynix plunged more than 13%.

With South Korea's market closed for a holiday, selling pressure intensified on Japan's technology market, and notably on Kioxia Holdings, said Daisuke Hashizume, a senior strategist at Daiwa Securities.

"The long-term trend ​for AI and data centres is unchanged, but right now investors are worried that memory chip ​prices can rise sustainably," Hashizume added.

Geopolitical tensions also remained elevated, with U.S. President Donald Trump threatening a broader escalation in ‌strikes ⁠on Iran.

Breadth was overwhelmingly negative, with 71 advancers in the Nikkei 225 against 152 decliners and two unchanged.

Kioxia was the index's biggest percentage loser, tumbling 16.1% for its steepest one-day decline since November 2025. It was followed by Sumco, down 15.17%, and Screen Holdings, which lost 12.04%.

AI euphoria ​in Japan is encapsulated ​in the fortunes ⁠of Kioxia, a once-struggling chipmaker whose market capitalisation briefly surpassed that of Toyota last month. But its share price has fallen more than 50% ​since then.

"I believe the market correction is dragging on as a reaction ​to the ⁠sharp rise that preceded it," said Shoichi Arisawa of Iwai Cosmo Securities. "That said, I don't think the business environment surrounding AI and semiconductor companies, or the current outlook for semiconductor demand, has changed."

Seven & ⁠I Holdings ​was among the top gainers in the Nikkei, rising ​3.64% after the company said it was in talks to buy a stake in Polish convenience store operator Zabka Group.

Reporting ​by Rocky Swift, Junko Fujita, Norihiko Hirata in Tokyo; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair and Sherry Jacob-Phillips

Source: Reuters


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