Japan’s Nikkei -5.4%, biggest drop since April tariff selloff.


Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 index suffered a brutal session on March 9, 2026, closing down approximately 5.2% (with intraday drops reaching over 6-7% in some reports) at around 52,728. This marks one of the steepest single-day declines in recent history, often cited as the third-largest point drop ever and the biggest since the April 2025 tariff-related selloff triggered by U.S. policy shifts.
The primary catalyst was the sharp surge in global oil prices, which briefly exceeded $100–$120 per barrel amid escalating Middle East conflict involving Iran. As a major oil importer, Japan faces heightened stagflation risks, with higher energy costs pressuring corporate margins, consumer spending, and the yen's value. Tech-heavy names like SoftBank Group and Advantest led losses, reflecting broader risk-off sentiment across Asia.
For crypto traders, this equity rout underscores growing macro correlations: Bitcoin and altcoins often move in tandem with global risk assets during commodity-driven shocks. The Nikkei's correction (now down over 10% from February highs) signals caution, as sustained oil volatility could prolong risk aversion and delay any crypto relief rally.
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