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Nikkei Retreats from Record High as AI Rally Sparks Caution

TOKYO, May 27 (Reuters) - Japan's Nikkei share average retreated from a record peak to end nearly ​flat on Wednesday, as investor caution grew about the ‌fast-paced rally in AI-related stocks.

The Nikkei closed at 64,999.41, after rising as much as 2.2% earlier in the session to hit a record ​intraday high of 66,428.81. The broader Topix fell ​0.52% to 3,918.01.

Shares of chipmaking equipment maker Tokyo Electron ⁠and chip-testing equipment maker Advantest ended up 2.1% and 4.05%, ​respectively, making them the biggest contributors to the Nikkei.

"Caution emerged ​for the high-pitched rally. The market sold AI-related shares that have gained in the latest sessions," said Shunichi Otsuka, general manager at the ​research and strategy department at Ichiyoshi Securities.

Uniqlo-brand owner Fast Retailing ​rose 3.06%.

SoftBank Group slid 7.26%, weighing most on the Nikkei and marking ‌the ⁠index's biggest percentage loss. The technology investor's shares are still up 7.62% so far this week, outpacing the Nikkei's 2.62% gain.

Fibre-optic cable maker Fujikura reversed early gains to end 3.55% ​lower. Its peer ​Furukawa Electric ⁠fell 6.7%.

High-flying memory maker Kioxia dropped 3.06%.

Banks and financials dragged the Topix lower. Sumitomo Mitsui ​Financial Group lost 1.9%, while Mitsubishi UFJ Financial ​Group ⁠and Mizuho Financial Group slipped 0.98% and 1.93%, respectively.

The Topix's value share index fell 0.85%, while the growth share index slipped ⁠0.15%.

Of ​the nearly 1,600 stocks trading on the ​Tokyo Stock Exchange's prime market, 45% rose, 50% fell, and 3% traded ​flat.

Reporting by Junko Fujita; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu and Sherry Jacob-Phillips

Source: Reuters


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