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2011年9月16日金曜日

Japan Stocks Rise as Germany, France Express Support for Greece - BusinessWeek

September 15, 2011, 3:34 AM EDT By Norie Kuboyama

Sept. 15 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese stocks advanced, with the Nikkei 225 Stock Average rising the most in a week, after German and French leaders said they are convinced Greece will remain in the euro zone and speculation grew that China may help the region’s most-indebted nations.

Kyocera Corp., an electronics maker that gets almost 20 percent of its sales in Europe, added 2.1 percent after the euro appreciated against the yen, boosting the exporter’s earnings outlook. Sumitomo Metal Industries Ltd., Japan’s No. 3 steelmaker, jumped 3.8 percent after Credit Suisse Group AG raised its stock price estimate. Elpida Memory Inc. paced chipmakers higher after saying it may shift some production overseas.

The Nikkei 225 advanced 1.8 percent to 8,668.86 at the 3 p.m. close in Tokyo, its biggest increase since Sept. 7. The broader Topix added 1.4 percent to 751.76, with more than five shares rising for each that fell.

“There was a concern that France and Germany would one- sidedly blame Greece and show no support, but the situation on Greece was not as bad as expected,” said Mitsushige Akino, who oversees about $600 million in Tokyo at Ichiyoshi Investment Management Co. ”Following the stronger euro, more companies sensitive to the euro on earnings will likely be bought.”

The Topix has fallen 16 percent this year amid concern U.S. growth is sputtering and Europe’s debt crisis will damage the banking system, damping demand in two of Japan’s biggest export markets.

Support For Greece

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index advanced for a third day yesterday in New York, rising 1.4 percent. French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel are “convinced” Greece will remain in the euro area, according to a statement issued by Sarkozy after they spoke to Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou by telephone. Futures on the S&P 500 were little changed today.

China is willing to buy the bonds of nations hit by the debt crisis, Caijing reported on its website yesterday, citing Zhang Xiaoqiang, a vice chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission.

Japanese exporters to Europe gained after the region’s shared currency appreciated against the majority of its most- traded counterparts. The euro advanced to 105.29 yen at the close of stock trading today in Tokyo, compared with 104.83 yesterday.

‘Buying Trigger’

Kyocera added 2.1 percent to 6,750 yen. Ricoh Co., an office-equipment and camera maker that obtains almost a quarter of its revenue in Europe, climbed 2.2 percent to 662 yen.

The euro’s advanced was a “buying trigger,” said Seiichiro Iwamoto, who helps oversee about $35 billion in Tokyo at Mizuho Asset Management Co. “Many companies are hedging for the dollar, but not for the euro. So, the impact from the euro’s appreciation on earnings is big.”

Sumitomo Metal Industries advanced 3.8 percent to 166 yen after Credit Suisse raised its price target for the steelmaker to 230 yen from 220 yen, citing higher prices for the company’s seamless pipes. Nippon Steel Corp. gained 3.6 percent to 231 yen after Credit Suisse raised its profit outlook for Japan’s No. 1 steelmaker.

Elpida, the world’s third-largest memory chipmaker, jumped 5 percent to 564 yen after saying it may shift some production to Taiwan as part of plans to cope with a stronger yen and an industry slump. Elpida has lost 40 percent this year.

Chip-related companies also advanced after the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, which tracks the performance of 30 industry stocks, rose yesterday for a third day to its highest level since Aug. 3. Dainippon Screen Manufacturing Co., a maker of chip-making equipment, soared 6 percent to 479 yen. Advantest Corp., the world’s biggest producer of chip testers, climbed 2.7 percent to 885 yen.

--With assistance from Toshiro Hasegawa in Tokyo. Editors: Jason Clenfield, John McCluskey.

To contact the reporters on this story: Norie Kuboyama in Tokyo at nkuboyama@bloomberg.net; Toshiro Hasegawa in Tokyo at thasegawa6@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Gentle at ngentle2@bloomberg.net.


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2011年9月10日土曜日

RUGBY UNION NEWS France v Japan - Sportinglife.com

France coach Marc Lievremont says his side are taking the threat posed by Japan seriously as they prepare to open their World Cup Pool A campaign tomorrow.

Les Bleus are expected to challenge hosts New Zealand for the top spot in the pool, and enter the tournament in good form having picked up back-to-back victories over Ireland.

They are expected to rack up a comfortable win at North Harbour Stadium, but Lievremont, who saw his side fall to a shock defeat against Italy in the Six Nations, knows from bitter experience that every underdog can have its day.

He told L'Equipe: "We take this team very seriously because it has such great talent. John Kirwan, their coach, is a former All Black and he has brought discipline and organisation to some great players with great courage.

"They have a very lively and beautiful individual technique. They are also more threatening with the ball than they were four years ago, when they were already producing an extremely offensive brand of rugby."

Lievremont, renowned for his lack of consistency in selection, has sprung a few surprises with his choice to face the Japanese.

Dimitri Yachvili is preferred to Morgan Parra at scrum-half after impressing in the first of those wins over Ireland, while Fabrice Estebanez slots into the centre alongside Aurelien Rougerie and Raphael Lakafia gets the nod ahead of Louis Picamoles at number eight.

Despite the pressure World Cups bring, Lievremont has been pleased to see his players in relaxed mood as the game's biggest event kicks off.

"Excessive pressure can damage players," he added. "You do not want a player banging his head on the wall 10 days before a game.

"It is better that the players are laughing together and expressing themselves.

"Our players have often required some form of fear to perform well, but this event and the need to succeed in this first game should provide enough motivation."

Kirwan's preparations have not been helped by the loss of New Zealand-born lock Justin Ives, who has been ruled out of the tournament with a knee injury. Yuji Kitagawa has been called up as his replacement.

But the Kiwi does have lock Luke Thompson and former Newport Gwent Dragons fly-half James Arlidge to call on.

Kirwan was part of the All Blacks side that won the 1987 tournament on home soil, and hopes his countrymen will back his side during the competition.

He said: "This is my home. I have asked New Zealand to support two sides this week.

"Next week they can have a week off and then support us again."


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