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				It was GPIF's fourth quarterly loss since it began shifting more 
				of its assets into stocks while slashing bond allocations in 
				October 2014.
 GPIF said foreign equities were its worst performers in 
				January-March with a negative return of 6.35 percent. Domestic 
				equities suffered a negative return of 4.72 percent.
 
 Japan's Nikkei 225 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 8.7 
				percent and 2.9 percent, respectively, during the quarter after 
				U.S. President Donald Trump in March signed a memorandum 
				targeting up to $60 billion Chinese goods with tariffs.
 
 The yen's 5.6 percent rise against the dollar during the quarter 
				also eroded the value of GPIF's overseas assets.
 
 GPIF had 156 trillion yen worth of assets under management as of 
				end-March.
 
 It allocated 25.14 percent to Japanese stocks, 27.5 percent to 
				domestic bonds, 23.88 percent to foreign stocks and 14.77 
				percent to foreign bonds during the quarter. The remaining 8.7 
				percent was in short-term assets, mainly cash.
 
 According to a Reuters calculation based on the fund's results, 
				it bought a net 1.8 trillion yen of foreign bonds, 230 billion 
				yen of foreign stocks and 70 billion yen of domestic equities, 
				while reducing 880 billion yen of JGBs.
 
 (Reporting by Takashi Umekawa; Editing by Chris Gallagher)
 
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