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Japanese stocks surged to a record high when markets opened on Monday morning, as Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) basked in a historic election victory.
The LDP secured 316 out of 465 seats in Sunday’s election, the first time a single party has won a two-thirds lower house majority since Japan’s parliament was established in its current form in 1947.
The Japan Innovation Party, the LDP’s coalition partner, won in 36 more constituencies, taking their combined total to 352 seats.
The resounding mandate is a gamble that paid off for Takaichi, who now faces the challenge of reviving Japan’s moribund economy and tackling cost-of-living woe.
The Nikkei 225 index rallied by more than 5% in early trade on Monday, briefly crossing the 57,000 mark for the first time.
The LDP’s decisive win will help Takaichi advance her pro-business policies without having to negotiate extensively with opposition parties.

Takaichi told reporters on Sunday that she would pursue a “responsible yet aggressive” fiscal policy and would not reshuffle the Cabinet, which was formed less than four months ago.
Japan’s first female prime minister called the snap election last month, just a few months after taking office in October. Her success is in marked contrast to her two predecessors, under whom the party lost its parliamentary majority, battled corruption scandals and struggled to curb rising costs.
Markets commentators say Takaichi’s policies could boost the Japanese economy.
The election outcome and upcoming moves like “stimulus, tax tweaks, and deregulation” will be “additional fuel for an existing bull trend”, investment analyst Yuka Marosek told the BBC.
Historically low inflation in the country has made it very sensitive to the rising cost of living over recent years.
At this election, voters at polling stations told the BBC that they were worried about the increasing costs of groceries and rent.
The economy is also under pressure from the country’s ageing population, which has seen a shrinking workforce and ballooning social care costs.
Takaichi has pledged to cut taxes and boost the Japanese economy through more spending – though where that money will come from is another big concern, given Japan’s high government debt. Critics warn this could deepen instability in Japan’s already fragile economy.
BBC
Written by: Blessing Nyor
As Japanese Stocks Surge Takaichi
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