Nikkei Tumbles 1.66 Percent Amid Shinzo Abe Resignation, UK-Japan Post-Brexit Trade Talks – Report

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The announcement, which shook markets over uncertainty for the world’s third-largest economy, comes amid ongoing post-Brexit trade talks between London and Tokyo, which could be delayed as the latter prepares for a change in government.

News of Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe’s declining health has sent markets tumbling on Friday, reports revealed.

The announcement of Mr Abe’s resignation, set to take place in 2021, as well as news from the US Federal Reserve sent the Nikkei 225 tumbling 1.66 percent but later recovered 88 points to 23,297.

The Shanghai composite rose 1.08 percent and the Hong Kong Hang Seng index climbed 161 points to 25,442, or 1.34 percent.

The 65-year-old leader who served eight years in office from 2012, resigned after worsening symptoms from ulcerative colitis, an inflammatory condition of the intestines. Abe was known for his ‘Abenomics’ policy of aggressive quantitative easing and conservative nationalism, and will remain Prime Minister until the government chooses a successor.

The news follows reports from the Nikkei Asian Review that Japan and the United Kingdom are set to ink a lucrative trade deal as soon as early September, with goods such as British cheese receiving tariff reductions.

UK trade secretary Liz Truss plans to conclude trade talks as the country finalises its post-Brexit transition period at the end of December. While the effects of news remain uncertain, it is understood it could push back the expected deadline.

According to CityAM, a Department for International Trade (DfIT) official said Japan was pressured to wrap up the deal by the end of August.

The trade deal aims to lower tariffs on British agricultural exports and boost access for Japanese digital service firms to UK markets, a source close to Ms Truss said as quoted by the newspaper.

 

Sourse: sputniknews.com

Nikkei Tumbles 1.66 Percent Amid Shinzo Abe Resignation, UK-Japan Post-Brexit Trade Talks – Report

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