The Nikkei
.N225 shed 1.2 percent to 10,039.33, after surging 2.4 percent on the previous
day to 10,160.40, logging its biggest one-day percentage rise since September
2011.
Selling
came after the Bank of Japan (BOJ) eased monetary policy on Thursday afternoon
by expanding its asset-buying and lending program.
It was a
widely expected move in response to intensifying pressure from incoming Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe for the BOJ to deliver bolder steps to beat deflation.
The
central bank topped up its asset-buying and lending program by 10 trillion yen
to 101 trillion yen by a unanimous vote, expanding stimulus for the third time
in four months.
"Some
investors were disappointed with the BOJ's asset-buying amount. It expanded the
program by 10 trillion yen for both short-term and longer-term bonds, but
investors were expecting as much as 10 trillion yen on just buying longer-term
bonds," said Norihiro Fujito, senior investment strategist at Mitsubishi
UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.
The BOJ's
shares (8031.OS) jumped 10.7 percent on Thursday, extending a 33 percent rally
over the past three sessions.
The bank
also signaled a review of its current 1 percent inflation target at its next
policy-setting meeting in January, when Abe will have a new cabinet in place
ready to negotiate with the central bank.
"Abe
has been demanding an inflation target of 2 percent, but the bank postponed the
decision about this without elaborating," Fujito said.
Automakers
were among the worst sectoral performers amid a 5.5 percent slump in Mitsubishi
Motors Corp (7211.T), after the company said it would recall about 1.2 million
minicar vehicles in Japan due to faulty engine oil seals.
Honda
Motor Co (7267.T) lost 1.8 percent. Nissan Motor Co (7201.T) sank 7.4 percent,
also hurt by a rating cut by Nomura, which said there was a risk of
deterioration in short-term earnings.
FOCUS
SHIFTS TO OVERSEAS DEVELOPMENTS
Abe, whose
opposition Liberal Democratic Party won Sunday's election by a landslide, has
called for the BOJ to adopt bolder policy action, including embarking on
"unlimited easing" and setting an inflation target of 2 percent. His
comments have softened the yen, which boosts the appeal of exporters' shares.
Analysts
said there may be a correction in the market by the end of the year without
good news on U.S. "fiscal cliff" talks.
"The
market has started taking profits as hopes for aggressive easing have been
priced into the current market for the rest of the year," said Fujio Ando,
senior managing director at Chibagin Asset Management.
"If
there is progress in talks on the U.S. 'fiscal cliff', the market may rise
further, but if not, the market may shed as much as a third of what it has
gained over the past month or so."
The Nikkei
has rallied 15.9 percent over the past five weeks, taking its year-to-date gain
to 18.7 percent, ahead of a 14.2 percent rise in the U.S. S&P 500 .INX and
a 15.2 percent gain in the pan-European STOXX Europe 600 .STOXX.
U.S.
President Barack Obama and congressional Republicans are struggling to come up
with a deal to avoid a fiscal cliff of $600 billion in tax hikes and spending
cuts, scheduled to start in January, which many economists say could send the
U.S. economy into recession.
The
broader Topix .TOPX was down 0.1 percent at 838.61 in active trade, with 3.74
billion shares changing hands on the board, compared with last week's daily
average of 2.29 billion shares.
Despite
Thursday's fall, the Nikkei was still deep in "overbought" territory,
with its 14-day relative strength index at 75.67, way above 70 which is deemed
overbought and signaling that a correction may be imminent.
Other
exporters also succumbed to profit-taking, including Canon Inc (7751.T), Ricoh
Ltd (7752.T) and industrial robot maker Fanuc Corp (6954.T), down between 2.1
and 3.6 percent.
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