Japan’s benchmark Nikkei share index capped off a historic week on June 19, 2026, logging its sharpest weekly gain in nearly two years. The market was supercharged by an explosive rally in artificial intelligence and chip-related stocks, driving the index to a series of unprecedented lifetime highs before a late-day Friday pullback pared some of the extreme gains.
The Nikkei closed Friday up 0.28% at 71,250.06, after climbing as high as 71,952.99 earlier in the session. Over the course of the week, the index skyrocketed by 7.9%, marking its most dominant weekly performance since August 2024 and securing its seventh consecutive session of gains.
Chip and AI Infrastructure Stocks Lead the Charge
The massive rally was driven by staggering corporate upgrades linked directly to global AI infrastructure demands:
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Fujikura (Fiber-Optic & Data Center Materials): The standout performer of the day, Fujikura’s stock surged 15.69% to hit its daily limit high of 5,161 yen. Investors piled into the stock after the company radically adjusted its annual net profit forecast upward to 229 billion yen ($1.42 billion), destroying its previous guidance of 156 billion yen.
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Furukawa Electric: Riding Fujikura’s AI-driven coattails, its fiber-optic peer surged by 15%.
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Semiconductor Giants: Prominent chip-sector heavyweights also posted major wins, with Kioxia leaping 12% and Advantest advancing 4.75%.
Conversely, the broader Topix index bucked the trend, sliding 0.57% to 4,044.96, dragged down by heavy profit-taking in the banking sector. Financial titans Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group and Mizuho Financial Group dropped 2.85% and 4.42%, respectively.
Geopolitical Friction Triggers Late-Day Cool-Off
The Nikkei’s afternoon momentum slowed following sudden diplomatic updates regarding the ongoing Middle East conflict. Markets reacted nervously to news from Switzerland that scheduled U.S. peace talks with Iranian negotiators would not take place on Friday, following Vice President JD Vance’s decision to cancel his travel plans to the region.
“The market expects more negotiations to come to end the war as there is a 60-day period to reach a final agreement, but this news came too suddenly and is an indication of a tough road ahead,” noted Daisuke Hashizume, senior strategist at Daiwa Securities.
Adding to the Friday afternoon cooling effect, investors actively locked in profits ahead of the weekend, particularly with Wall Street scheduled to be closed for the Juneteenth holiday. Despite the late-day caution, the underlying structural demand for hardware supporting the global AI economy left Japan’s market in a fiercely strong position.
