TOKYO, Sept 18 (Reuters) - Japan's Nikkei share closed
above 45,000 for the first time on Thursday, underpinned by
technology shares, as optimism swept into the market following
the U.S. Federal Reserve's widely anticipated 25-basis-point
interest rate cut.
The Nikkei 225 Index jumped 1.15% to close at
45,303.43, and also set an intraday record of 45,508.67,
surpassing the previous high set earlier this week. The broader
Topix recovered from an early dip to advance 0.4%.
Global markets have been on tenterhooks awaiting a rate cut
from the U.S. central bank and signals of further stimulus for
the world's biggest economy that is a destination for much of
Japan's exports.
The Dow index of blue-chip U.S. shares finished higher,
while the yen reversed an initial surge after the Federal Open
Market Committee's decision, which projected two additional cuts
this year.
"The Nikkei started higher today, buoyed by the relief
following the smooth passage of last night's FOMC meeting, the
Dow's rebound, and ongoing yen depreciation," said Nomura
strategist Maki Sawada.
"The 45,000 level is indeed a psychological threshold, and
after breaching it, the environment seems conducive to
profit-taking."
Trader focus has now shifted to the Bank of Japan's two-day
meeting, which concludes on Friday. While policymakers are
widely expected to stand pat on key rates, markets will be
watching closely for any signals on when the central bank might
resume rate hikes as part of its long-term normalization
strategy.
There were 129 advancers on the Nikkei index against 94
decliners.
Semiconductor-supplier Resonac Holdings ( SHWDF ) led gains
in the Nikkei with an 11.7% surge, while chip heavyweights
Advantest ( ADTTF ) and Tokyo Electron ( TOELF ) both jumped about
5%.
The largest losers were utilities, with Tokyo Electric Power ( TKECF )
dropping 7.7% and Tokyo Gas ( TKGSF ) shedding 5.2%.