By Sarah Turner, MarketWatch

SYDNEY (MarketWatch) -- Japanese stocks fell sharply Friday, the worst performer in a broadly lower Asia, with the yen rising on renewed safe-haven buying interest as Cyprus faced a restructuring deadline and as the new Bank of Japan governor offered few new details on future policy.

Japan's Nikkei Stock Average fell 1.1%, while South Korea's Kospi and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index .each lost 0.1%.

Helping weigh on sentiment in Asia, U.S. stocks ended lower Thursday, hurt by ongoing concerns about Cyprus's financial future and weak euro-zone economic data.

"The European Central Bank gave Cyprus until Monday to sort out its mess and legislate the bailout program -- otherwise it threatened to withdraw crucial funding," Perpetual Investments head of investment research Matthew Sherwood said.

"If the latter occurred, and no new capital sources could be identified, the Cypriot banking sector would collapse, and it would be forced out of the euro zone," Sherwood said, referring to the biggest worry for investors from the evolving situation.

Against that backdrop, the dollar (USDJPY) slid to 94.89 yen early Friday, down from Yen94.94 late Thursday and well below its Yen96.03 level late Wednesday.

Japanese companies that translate a significant proportion of their profit back into yen traded lower, with Advantest Corp , (ATE) down 1.8%, Fanuc Corp. (FANUY) falling 3.3%, and Panasonic Corp. (PC) down 1.4%, also reacting to a Nikkei news report saying it was negotiating with its labor union to cut bonuses and lengthen its work week.

Banks were also weak in Tokyo, after new Bank of Japan Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda failed to offer specifics over the timing and exact nature of new policy moves at the central bank during his press briefing late Thursday.

Also in Japan, Seven & I Holdings Co. (SVNDY) fell 1.5% despite a Nikkei news report tipping the owner of 7-Eleven convenience stores to post a record operating profit for the year ended in February.

However, a few higher-end Tokyo-listed retailers managed to gain, with Aeon Co. (AONNF) adding 0.5%, and J. Front Retailing Co. moving 0.6% higher.

Retailers lost ground in Australia, with David Jones Ltd. down 2.6% and Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd. falling 1.3%, although Billabong International Ltd. rose 5.8% to retrace a portion of plunge from the previous session.

Contracting firm Leighton Holdings Ltd. fell 6.6% after the firm announced the resignation of its chairman and two non-executive directors, over a potential breakdown in its relationship with major shareholder Hochtief AG

Techs were losing ground in South Korea, with Samsung Electronics Co. (SSNLF) inching 0.2% lower, and rival SK Hynix Inc. (HXSCL) down 0.5%.

Shares of SK Telecom Co. (SKM) extended their losses, dropping 3.3%, in the wake of a major cyberattack believed to be the work of North Korea.

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