HomeReference › Nikkei 225 Explained

Nikkei 225 Explained — Japan’s Premier Stock Market Index

The Nikkei 225 (formally the Nikkei Stock Average) is Japan’s most widely quoted stock market index, tracking 225 large-cap companies listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. Like the Dow Jones, it uses a price-weighted methodology — an unusual feature that makes stock price, not company size, the driver of influence on the index.

What Is the Nikkei 225?

The Nikkei 225 has been calculated since September 7, 1950, and is published by Nihon Keizai Shimbun (the Japan Economic Newspaper — “Nikkei” for short). It was retroactively computed back to May 1949. The index covers 225 companies selected from the TSE Prime Market (formerly the First Section) and is reviewed annually every October, with occasional interim changes.

The Nikkei 225 is Japan’s equivalent of the Dow Jones in more ways than one — both are price-weighted, both track a relatively small number of blue-chip companies, and both are the most media-quoted indexes in their respective countries despite not being the most representative benchmarks available.

How Is the Nikkei 225 Calculated?

Just like the Dow, the Nikkei 225 sums the stock prices of its 225 components and divides by a divisor. A stock trading at ¥50,000 has 50 times more influence than one at ¥1,000 — regardless of market cap. This makes the index somewhat quirky. For a market-cap-weighted alternative, Japanese investors and fund managers use the TOPIX (Tokyo Stock Price Index).

NIKKEI 225 CALCULATION Nikkei 225 = Σ (225 Stock Prices) ÷ Divisor

Top Nikkei 225 Components

CompanySector
Fast Retailing (Uniqlo)Consumer Discretionary
Tokyo ElectronTechnology / Semiconductors
SoftBank GroupCommunication / Investment
KDDITelecommunications
Daikin IndustriesIndustrials
FanucIndustrials / Robotics
Shin-Etsu ChemicalMaterials / Semiconductors
Toyota MotorAutomobiles
Sony GroupTechnology / Entertainment
KeyenceTechnology / Sensors

Due to price-weighting, Fast Retailing (trading at ~¥35,000+) has disproportionate influence despite not being the largest company by market cap. Toyota, Japan’s largest company, has less index impact because its share price is lower.

The 1989 Bubble and Its Legacy

The Nikkei 225 hit an all-time high of 38,957 on December 29, 1989, at the peak of Japan’s asset bubble. It then entered one of the longest and deepest bear markets in modern financial history, falling below 8,000 by 2003 and again in 2009. The index didn’t surpass its 1989 peak until February 2024 — a 34-year wait that stands as the most dramatic cautionary tale about valuations and market bubbles in investing history.

Nikkei 225 vs. TOPIX

FeatureNikkei 225TOPIX
Components225 stocks~2,000 stocks
WeightingPrice-weightedMarket-cap weighted
CoverageLarge-caps onlyBroad market
SelectionNikkei committeeAll TSE Prime stocks
Professional useMedia benchmarkFund benchmark
U.S. equivalentDow JonesS&P 500

How to Invest

U.S. investors can access the Nikkei 225 through the MAXIS Nikkei 225 ETF (NKY) listed in the U.S., or through broader Japan ETFs like the iShares MSCI Japan ETF (EWJ) which tracks a market-cap-weighted Japan index. Currency-hedged options like the WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity Fund (DXJ) remove yen/dollar currency risk.

Analyst Tip
Japan’s market took 34 years to recover its 1989 peak — the most powerful lesson in finance about buying at extreme valuations. But that doesn’t make Japan uninvestable today. Post-2024, corporate governance reforms, share buybacks, and a weaker yen are structurally improving Japanese equities. The TOPIX is the better analytical benchmark; the Nikkei 225 is the one you’ll see on TV.

Key Takeaways

  • The Nikkei 225 tracks 225 large-cap Japanese stocks and is Japan’s most recognized index.
  • It’s price-weighted (like the Dow Jones), so high-priced stocks like Fast Retailing dominate regardless of company size.
  • The TOPIX is the market-cap-weighted alternative preferred by institutional investors.
  • The 1989 bubble peak wasn’t surpassed for 34 years — a historic reminder about valuation discipline.
  • U.S. investors can access Japan via EWJ (broad), NKY (Nikkei-specific), or DXJ (currency-hedged).

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did the Nikkei 225 take 34 years to recover its 1989 high?

Japan’s asset bubble in the late 1980s pushed stock and real estate prices to extreme levels. When the bubble burst, Japan entered a prolonged period of deflation, near-zero interest rates, banking crises, and stagnant economic growth often called the “Lost Decades.” The structural cleanup took generations.

What’s the difference between the Nikkei 225 and TOPIX?

The Nikkei 225 is price-weighted and covers 225 stocks — similar to the Dow Jones. TOPIX is market-cap-weighted and covers roughly 2,000 stocks on the Tokyo Stock Exchange — similar to the S&P 500. TOPIX is a better measure of the broad Japanese market; the Nikkei 225 is better known in media.

Is the Nikkei 225 a good investment?

Japan offers diversification from U.S. markets, and recent corporate governance reforms have improved shareholder returns. However, currency risk (yen vs. dollar) is a major factor for U.S. investors. A hedged fund like DXJ removes this risk; an unhedged fund like EWJ exposes you to both Japanese equities and yen movements.

What time does the Nikkei 225 trade?

The Tokyo Stock Exchange operates from 9:00 AM to 3:30 PM Japan Standard Time (JST), with a lunch break from 11:30 AM to 12:30 PM. For U.S. Eastern Time, that’s approximately 7:00 PM to 1:30 AM ET — overnight for American investors.

How often is the Nikkei 225 rebalanced?

The Nikkei 225 is reviewed annually in October. The selection committee considers sector balance, liquidity, and market representation. Changes are typically limited to a few stocks per year, similar in spirit to how the Dow Jones is managed.