
Chart of the day
- June 10, 2025
- 3min read
Japan’s Resilience Shines Through—Eyes Now on NIKKEI 225 Breakout Potential
Japan surprised markets yesterday as its Q1 GDP held steady at 0.0% QoQ, outperforming expectations of a slight contraction. While growth stagnated on paper, this flatline came as a relief to investors expecting worse, especially following the economy’s -0.7% performance in Q4 2024.
Japan’s Economy: Resilient Now, Cautious Path Forward
The underlying picture suggests a slowly healing economy:
- Consumer spending eked out modest gains, revised slightly higher.
- Capital investment held up, buoyed by infrastructure and corporate confidence.
- Exports, however, remain a drag—hit by global trade tensions and fresh U.S. auto tariffs (25%) that kicked in this April.
On the inflation front, core CPI remains above 2%, largely driven by food and energy, while real wage growth remains elusive. The Bank of Japan has cautiously exited negative rates, now targeting ~0.25%, but is signaling patience before any further hikes—especially after downgrading FY25–26 growth forecasts to 0.5% and 0.7% respectively.
Forward Risks
Japan faces several headwinds:
- Slowing global demand, particularly from China.
- U.S. protectionism, impacting key exports like autos and electronics.
- Subdued real wage growth, which continues to cap household spending potential.
Yet, the Q2 outlook appears brighter, with early estimates pointing to +0.6% QoQ growth. Japan seems poised for a modest but stable recovery—if global conditions don’t deteriorate further.
Technical Spotlight: NIKKEI 225 Eyes a Major Breakout
Since early April, the NIKKEI 225 has staged an impressive rebound, rallying off March lows and reclaiming momentum. The benchmark index currently trades around 38,211, brushing against the upper boundary of a descending channel that’s been in place for nearly a year.
Key Chart Observations:
- Pattern: Long-term descending channel.
- Current Action: Price approaching upper resistance (~38,500).
- Momentum: Bullish trend since April, supported by better-than-expected economic data and dovish BOJ commentary.
If the NIKKEI can sustain a breakout above 39,000, it would mark a technical shift—possibly opening the door to retest February highs near 41,000. However, a failure here could trigger a pullback, retesting lower channel support around 33,000.
Final Thoughts
With domestic demand recovering, inflation steady, and the BOJ still cautious, Japan offers a rare macro mix: relative stability amid global turbulence. Technically, the NIKKEI 225 is testing a pivotal level—investors will be watching for a confirmation breakout or rejection in coming sessions.
Keep an eye on:
- BOJ statements
- U.S.–Japan trade developments
- Continued earnings strength and wage data
Japan may not be sprinting ahead—but it’s clearly no longer lagging behind.