Foreigners sell Japanese stocks for third straight week as Nikkei hits record amid inflation concerns

Foreigners divested a ⁠net 785.1 billion yen ($4.89 billion) of Japanese stocks during the week

By Reuters Published: 2026-06-18T09:39:00+04:00 1 min read
A pedestrian stands in front of a stock quotation board showing the Nikkei share average outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, June 12, 2026. REUTERS
A pedestrian stands in front of a stock quotation board showing the Nikkei share average outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, June 12, 2026. REUTERS

Foreign investors sold Japanese stocks for ​a third consecutive week through June ‌13, ​as inflation concerns and last week's selloff in tech shares fueled risk-off sentiment. A U.S.-Iran peace agreement, however, has sharply improved investor risk appetite this week.

Foreigners divested a ⁠net 785.1 billion yen ($4.89 billion) of Japanese stocks during the week, slightly higher than the 700.6 billion yen in net ‌sales recorded the previous week, Ministry of Finance data showed on Thursday.

The Nikkei, meanwhile, ‌has climbed as much as 14.5% from ‌last week's low of 62,335.75 to ‌a record 71,398.58 ‌on Thursday.

Even after recent outflows, foreign inflows into Japanese stocks stand ​at 9.85 ‌trillion yen ​so far this year, ⁠far exceeding the 1.73 trillion yen seen a year earlier. Foreigners also withdrew 531 ​billion ⁠yen from ⁠Japanese long-term bonds and 247.9 billion yen from short-term bills last week, ahead of an ⁠expectedrate hike by the Bank of Japan on Tuesday.

At the same time, Japanese investors sold a net 418.3 billion yen of overseas stocks, extending their recent ‌run of net sales to a fourth consecutive week.

They ​were, however, net buyers of foreign long-term bonds for a second consecutive week, purchasing a net 382.6 billion yen.