Japanese government bonds gained even as the country’s industrial output grew in December at the fastest pace in eight months, and up for a third straight month, in a sign that its humming factories have likely driven economic expansion for an eighth consecutive quarter. Investors will now remain focused to watch the 10-year auction, scheduled to be held on February 1 for further direction in the debt market.
The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves inversely to its price, slipped 1 basis point to 0.09 percent, the yield on the long-term 30-year note remained tad lower at 0.81 percent and the yield on short-term 2-year traded 1/2 basis point lower at -0.13 percent by 05:40 GMT.
Trade ministry data out on Wednesday showed factory output grew 2.7 percent in December from the previous month, handily beating economists’ median estimate of a 1.6 percent increase, following a 0.5 percent gain in November.
The gain was led by transport equipment, and general-purpose, production and business-oriented machinery. Manufacturers surveyed by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) expect output to fall 4.3 percent in January and increase 5.7 percent in February, Reuters reported.
Meanwhile, the Nikkei 225 index fell 0.45 percent to 23,187.00 by 05:45 GMT, while at 05:00GMT, the FxWirePro's Hourly JPY Strength Index remained neutral at 9.38 (a reading above +75 indicates a bullish trend, while that below -75 a bearish trend). For more details, visit http://www.fxwirepro.com/currencyindex
FxWirePro launches Absolute Return Managed Program. For more details, visit http://www.fxwirepro.com/invest


US-India Trade Bombshell: Tariffs Slashed to 18% — Rupee Soars, Sensex Explodes
Asian Markets Slip as AI Spending Fears Shake Tech, Wall Street Futures Rebound
Japanese Pharmaceutical Stocks Slide as TrumpRx.gov Launch Sparks Market Concerns
Gold Prices Slide Below $5,000 as Strong Dollar and Central Bank Outlook Weigh on Metals
Fed Governor Lisa Cook Warns Inflation Risks Remain as Rates Stay Steady
Oil Prices Slip as U.S.–Iran Talks Ease Supply Disruption Fears
Oil Prices Slide on US-Iran Talks, Dollar Strength and Profit-Taking Pressure 



