
Key Points
- The Nikkei 225 rose 3.58% to 52,889.85, while the broader Topix gained 2.5% to 3,648.78.
- The BOJ Tankan showed large manufacturers’ sentiment at +17 versus a +16 forecast, while large non-manufacturers came in at +36 against a +33 forecast.
- WTI crude fell $1.28, or 1.24%, to $101.60, easing some pressure on Japan’s import-heavy economy.
Japanese equities bounced hard after oil prices pulled back and Wall Street delivered a strong lead. The Nikkei 225 climbed 3.58% to 52,889.85, snapping a four-session losing streak, while the Topix rose 2.5% to 3,648.78.
Lower crude prices gave traders a reason to buy risk again. Japan imports most of its energy, so a drop in oil cuts pressure on company costs, household spending, and inflation expectations. Reports that Washington was willing to push for a diplomatic reopening of the Strait of Hormuz helped drive WTI down $1.28 to $101.60 per barrel.
The rebound was strong, but the market is still trading off headline risk. Oil remains high, and the Middle East conflict has not been resolved.
Tankan Data Supports the Bounce
The latest BOJ Tankan survey gave the market a second reason to rally. Large manufacturers’ sentiment rose to +17 in March from +15 in December, beating the +16 forecast. Large non-manufacturers improved to +36 from +34, ahead of the +33 forecast.
The survey showed firms were holding up better than expected even after the energy shock. Reuters also reported that large companies plan to raise capital expenditure by 3.3% in fiscal 2026, above the 3.0% median forecast.
That mix supported the rebound because it suggested the corporate sector had not rolled over. The outlook components were softer, though, so companies are still preparing for a tougher backdrop if energy prices rise again.
Global Markets Add Support
Wall Street handed Asia a strong lead. The Nasdaq rose 3.8%, the S&P 500 gained 2.9%, and the Dow added 2.5%. European markets also closed higher, with the CAC 40 up 0.6% and both the DAX and FTSE 100 up 0.5%.
The yen also moved away from the most pressured part of its recent range. Reuters reported it traded near 158.55 per dollar, firmer than the 160.46 low seen earlier this year.
A steadier yen reduces some of the stress around imported inflation, even if it trims part of the export boost from a weaker currency.
Technical Analysis
Nikkei 225 is trading near 53,130, attempting a modest rebound after a sustained pullback from the 60,077 high. Price action shows the market trying to stabilise after a series of lower highs and lower lows, though upside momentum remains limited as the index continues to trade below key resistance levels.
From a technical standpoint, the trend has shifted to neutral to bearish in the short term. Price is trading below the 10-day (52,609) and 20-day (53,380) moving averages, which are now acting as overhead resistance, while the 30-day (54,761) continues to slope downward, reinforcing the loss of upward momentum. The 5-day (52,234) is beginning to turn higher, suggesting a short-term bounce, but this remains corrective unless stronger follow-through develops.

Key levels to watch:
- Support: 50,500 → 48,000 → 47,000
- Resistance: 53,400 → 54,700 → 57,500
The index is currently testing the 53,300–53,400 zone, which aligns with the 20-day average and has capped recent recovery attempts. A sustained break above this area could open the way toward 54,700, where the 30-day average may present stronger resistance.
On the downside, 50,500 remains the key near-term support. A break below this level would signal renewed selling pressure and could expose a move toward 48,000.
Overall, the Nikkei 225 is in a corrective phase following its earlier rally, with price still struggling to reclaim key moving averages. Unless the index can push decisively above the 53,400 level, rallies are likely to face resistance, keeping the near-term bias tilted to the downside.
What Traders Should Watch Next
The next move depends on whether oil stays off the highs, whether the Iran conflict cools further, and whether Japanese data keeps showing resilience. Another drop in crude would support importers, banks, and domestic cyclicals. A fresh spike in energy prices would put inflation and margins back under pressure quickly.
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Trader Questions
Why Did the Nikkei 225 Rise So Strongly?
The Nikkei 225 rose 3.58% to 52,889.85 as lower oil prices eased pressure on Japan’s import-heavy economy and stronger global equities improved risk appetite.
How Did Falling Oil Prices Help Japanese Stocks?
Japan imports most of its energy, so lower crude prices reduce cost pressure on companies, ease imported inflation, and support household spending. WTI fell $1.28, or 1.24%, to $101.60 in the move that helped lift sentiment.
What Did the Tankan Survey Show?
The BOJ Tankan showed large manufacturers’ sentiment at +17 versus a +16 forecast, while large non-manufacturers came in at +36 against a +33 forecast. Large firms also planned 3.3% capex growth for fiscal 2026, ahead of the 3.0% median forecast.
Why Did Exporters, Banks, and Chip Stocks Lead the Rally?
Exporters benefited from improved global sentiment, banks tracked the rebound in cyclical risk appetite, and chip names followed the strong move in US tech. The session also showed broad participation, which gave the rebound more strength than a narrow bounce.
Why Did Inpex Lag The Market?
Lower oil prices reduced support for energy producers, and Inpex fell 2.6% while most of the broader market rallied.