Stock Markets April 28, 2026 10:59 AM

Citi Sees Limited Overheating Risk in Japan's Tech-Led Rally

Bank expects a gradual rebalancing toward lagging TOPIX sectors rather than a sharp tech-driven correction

By Leila Farooq
Citi Sees Limited Overheating Risk in Japan's Tech-Led Rally

Japanese stocks have surged in April, with the Nikkei 225 topping 60,000 and reaching year-to-date highs as AI and semiconductor names lead gains. Citi warns that, unlike last autumn, the high-tech segment now shows little evidence of overheating and that a broadening of investor interest into lagging TOPIX sectors could normalize the Nikkei/TOPIX gap without a steep pullback.

Key Points

  • April's rally pushed the Nikkei 225 above 60,000 and to year-to-date highs, driven mainly by AI and semiconductor-related stocks.
  • Citi attributes the rise in the Nikkei/TOPIX ratio to outperformance in electric appliances and information and communications sectors, which are heavily weighted in the Nikkei 225.
  • Citi expects the elevated Nikkei/TOPIX ratio to normalize through laggard TOPIX sectors catching up, rather than through a sharp, tech-led correction; sectors likely to see renewed interest include construction, real estate, finance, defense and energy.

Japanese equities staged a pronounced recovery in April, culminating in the Nikkei 225 moving past the 60,000 mark and registering year-to-date highs. The advance has been narrowly concentrated in AI and semiconductor-related names, a pattern that has lifted the Nikkei/TOPIX ratio to an all-time peak of 16.2.

According to Citi, the recent uptick in the Nikkei/TOPIX ratio can be traced mainly to stronger performance in the electric appliances and information and communications sectors, which carry outsized weightings within the Nikkei 225. The bank’s analysis highlights that these sector-level moves account for much of the ratio's rise in April.

Market observers note a precedent from last September and October, when a comparable concentration of strength in high-technology shares was followed by underperformance in those names from November as the Nikkei corrected. Citi, however, assesses the current environment differently.

In its assessment, Citi finds limited evidence of overheating in the high-tech space this time around. The bank points to several indicators it views as supportive of a more restrained valuation profile: a marked increase in global semiconductor sales, an MSCI Japan IT earnings revision index that is running ahead of the broader market, and a price-to-earnings-growth ratio for the high-tech segment that remains below that of TOPIX. Taken together, these metrics underpin Citi’s view that valuation levels are not signaling an elevated risk of an abrupt selloff.

Rather than expecting a technology-led correction, Citi anticipates that the unusually high Nikkei/TOPIX ratio will narrow through lagging stocks catching up. The bank argues that if geopolitical tensions in the Middle East ease, investor attention is likely to broaden beyond momentum-driven high-tech names and extend into sectors with meaningful TOPIX weightings, including construction, real estate, finance, defense and energy.

Citi's base case is therefore a gradual rebalancing of relative performance across the benchmark indices rather than a sharp reversal concentrated in technology. The bank frames the likely adjustment as a broadening of market participation from the current leadership toward sectors that have underperformed, which would normalize the Nikkei/TOPIX split over time.


What this means for markets

The current configuration suggests concentrated returns driven by AI and semiconductor names have pushed headline Nikkei measures to new heights, while underlying valuation and earnings signals cited by Citi do not point to an imminent systemic correction. Market participants should monitor sector breadth and geopolitical risk as potential catalysts for the anticipated rebalancing.

Risks

  • If the factors Citi cites as supportive change, the limited evidence of overheating could prove insufficient, potentially leaving the market vulnerable - this risk would particularly affect technology and semiconductor-related equities.
  • Renewed or prolonged Middle East uncertainty could prevent the shift in investor interest from high-tech momentum names into lagging TOPIX sectors, sustaining the current concentration of gains and volatility in equity leadership.
  • A reversal in global semiconductor sales momentum or a deterioration in IT earnings revisions relative to the broader market could weaken Citi's rationale that valuations remain reasonable, impacting Japan's high-tech sectors.

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