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Japan stocks surge to record, bonds slide with yen on Takaichi's landslide election win

ReutersFeb 9, 2026 12:27 AM

By Kevin Buckland

- Japanese stocks jumped to record peaks while bonds slid and the yen sagged to an all-time low against the Swiss franc after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi scored a landslide win in Sunday's snap election.

The Nikkei 225 share average .N225 rallied 2.6% to an unprecedented 55,681.11 shortly after markets opened.

The broader Topix .TOPX advanced 2.4% to a record 3,789.10.

Benchmark 10-year Japanese government bond futures 2JGBv1 declined 0.37 yen to 131.22 yen.

The 30-year JGB was the only cash bond that had traded as of 0005 GMT, with the yield JP30YTN=JBTC climbing as much as 6.5 basis points to 3.615%. Bond yields rise when prices fall.

The yen eased as much as 0.3% to reach 203.30 per franc CHFJPY= for the first time ever.

Japan's currency declined 0.4% to 186.55 per euro EURJPY=, putting it close to the record low of 186.86 from last month. It fell 0.5% to as low as 157.95 per U.S. dollar JPY=, a two-week trough.

Takaichi's victory paves the way for promised tax relief and big fiscal spending that have spooked markets since she came to power last year, depressing the yen and sending bond yields soaring to all-time highs, while also stoking a record rally in stocks.

"This victory will help advance Takaichi's pro-stimulus policies, allowing her to move forward without needing to negotiate with other parties on every issue," said Mahjabeen Zaman, head of FX strategy at ANZ Bank.

"We do expect the yen to be weaker going forward," she said.

"In terms of JGB yields, we expect them to also move higher, just reflecting higher inflation expectations and a little bit of that fiscal agenda."

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