Key Points
- Nikkei 225 fails to reclaim its all-time high, peaking mid-week at 48,317 before reversing sharply.
- The index posted a deceptive 1.57% weekly gain, a figure that masks a brutal 1.44% sell-off on Friday.
- Friday's plunge created a stark negative divergence from the strong gains seen in US markets.

Nikkei 225’s Failed Rally: Why Did the Index Diverge So Sharply from the US?
The Nikkei 225 (NIK) index concluded a week of extreme volatility with a 1.57% gain, a headline figure that completely belies the severe underlying weakness that emerged in the final session. After a powerful mid-week surge brought the index within sight of its all-time high, sellers took decisive control. This culminated in a 1.44% plunge on Friday to close at 47,582.15. This sharp sell-off, which diverged dramatically from positive sentiment on Wall Street, signals that investor conviction in the Japanese rally is fracturing and raises new alarms about the market’s technical health.
A Week of Violent Swings
This past week’s trading was a showcase of investor indecision, defined by massive intraday ranges. The week began with a continuation of selling pressure, as the index plunged to a low of 46,544.05 on Tuesday, indicating a deep test of support following the October 9th peak. However, this dip was aggressively bought, triggering a powerful two-day relief rally. The index rocketed higher on Wednesday and Thursday, closing at 47,672.67 and 48,277.74 respectively. This move, which hit a weekly high of 48,317.34, was a clear attempt by bulls to rechallenge the record high of 48,597.08.
The Rejection from the Peak
The attempt to make a new record failed decisively. The 48,300-48,600 zone proved to be a formidable wall of supply, and the rally’s momentum evaporated. Friday’s session was a brutal reversal. The index fell 695 points, closing near its session low and completely erasing Thursday’s gains. This behavior—a failure at a key high followed by a strong rejection—is a classic bearish signal, suggesting a short-term top may be in place. It indicates that, at these lofty valuations, profit-takers and institutional sellers are overwhelming new buyers.
A Stark Divergence from Global Peers
The most concerning aspect of Friday’s sell-off was its stark disconnect from other global markets. While the DJIA, S&P 500, and Nasdaq all registered solid gains of over 0.50%, the Nikkei plunged. This negative divergence is a significant red flag. It suggests the selling pressure is not due to a global risk-off event but to factors endemic to Japan. This could include a strengthening yen, shifting outlooks on Bank of Japan policy, or simply the technical exhaustion of the year’s powerful rally. Investors are clearly treating Japanese equities with a degree of caution not seen in their US counterparts.
Looking ahead, the technical battle lines are sharply defined. The 48,597 all-time high is now a confirmed and powerful resistance ceiling. For the bulls to regain control, they must absorb this wave of selling and mount a new, high-volume assault on that peak. To the downside, the 47,500 level, which was Friday’s closing area, and the weekly low near 46,500 have become critical support zones. A break below these levels would confirm the bearish reversal and could usher in a more significant correction for the Japanese market.
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