Japan's Nikkei share average rose for a third day on Thursday to hit a record high, riding a wave of technology sector enthusiasm that overshadowed a slump in the broader market. The benchmark Nikkei 225 Index was ‌up 0.37% ⁠at 63,507.09 after ⁠touching an unprecedented 63,799.32 earlier in the day. The broader Topix slid 0.47% to 3,901.25. Tech shares helped Wall Street indexes notch record closing levels overnight. And as the earnings season in Japan winds to a close, Topix-listed companies are set to post nearly 6% ⁠growth in net ‌profit, an SMBC Nikko Securities tally showed on Wednesday, driven in part by artificial intelligence-linked demand. "Technology, ⁠semiconductor, and electronic component-related stocks are leading the Japanese stock market today," said Wataru Akiyama, an equities strategist at Nomura Securities. "Looking at the performance of individual stocks today, there are still quite a few being sold off due to negative earnings, so investor caution is warranted." SoftBank Group, an AI ‌investor that has been a big contributor to gains in the Nikkei this year, said on Wednesday that its net ⁠profit more than tripled in the January-March quarter. Even so, the company's shares slid 2.6%. There were 96 advancers on the Nikkei index against 129 decliners. The largest percentage gainers in the index were Tokai Carbon, up 15%, followed by Rohm Co, which jumped 13.8%. The largest losers were Mitsubishi Materials, down 11.3%, followed by Dai Nippon Printing, which slid 10.8%.