Here’s the Asia-Pacific Daily Preview post for June 5, 2026:
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- Nikkei surged 2.5% and TAIEX jumped 2.0% while Hang Seng fell 1.6% — a sharp tech-vs-cyclical split across the region
- US overnight rotation out of tech (XLK -1.6%) into financials (XLF +2.6%) and small caps (Russell +1.5%) sets a mixed open for Asia's tech-heavy boards
- Oil crashed 3.3% despite US-Iran tension headlines — watch energy names across ASX and SGX for follow-through selling
Japan and Taiwan posted their strongest sessions in weeks while Hong Kong sold off hard — and now the overnight US session delivered the same split, with tech bleeding and financials surging, leaving Asia’s Friday open with no clean read.
Where Asia Closed Yesterday
The Nikkei 225 led the region with a 2.50% gain to 68,402, its best day in over a month. A weaker yen (USD/JPY holding above 160) and broad-based buying across exporters and financials drove the move. Taiwan’s TAIEX matched that energy with a 1.98% rally to 46,459 — semiconductor names carried the index after positive supply-chain signals.
On the other side of the ledger, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped 1.56% to 25,633. The decline came despite modest gains on the mainland — Shanghai Composite edged up 0.22% to 4,084 while the Shenzhen Component added 0.73%. That divergence points to Hong Kong-specific selling pressure, likely foreign fund outflows rather than a macro China story.
Australia’s ASX 200 gained 0.70% to 8,786, helped by materials and banks. Singapore’s Straits Times Index rose 0.80% to 5,138. India’s Nifty 50 slipped 0.33%, a mild pullback after recent strength. Korea’s KOSPI was essentially flat at +0.15%. New Zealand was unchanged.
US Overnight Snapshot
Wall Street delivered a rotation trade, not a rally. The S&P 500 added 0.41% but the Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.09% — the divergence driven by a sharp 1.56% decline in the Technology sector (XLK) against a 2.59% surge in Financials (XLF). The Russell 2000 jumped 1.51%, its strongest session in weeks, confirming the move was about domestic cyclicals, not growth.
The VIX fell 4.1% to 15.4 — comfortably below the 20 threshold — suggesting the selling in tech was orderly rotation rather than panic. Headlines flagged US-Iran hostilities as a late-session drag, but the index-level damage was contained. For Asia, the tech weakness matters most: HKEX and KOSPI tech names will feel the Nasdaq drag, while Japan’s financials-heavy Nikkei and Australia’s bank-weighted ASX may catch a tailwind from the XLF strength.
Commodity + FX Watch
Gold climbed 1.45% — a safe-haven bid likely tied to the Iran headlines. Oil moved in the opposite direction, with WTI crude dropping 3.29% to $92.90, an unusually large decline given the geopolitical backdrop. That signals demand concerns are overriding supply-risk fears. ASX energy names and SGX-listed commodity traders will open under pressure. Copper added 0.71%, a modest positive for ASX miners like BHP and Rio.
In FX, AUD/USD fell 0.55% to 0.713 — a headwind for Australian equities priced in local currency terms. USD/JPY was flat at 160, maintaining the weak-yen setup that has been fueling the Nikkei’s exporter rally. Watch whether the yen holds here — any BoJ intervention chatter could snap back the exporter trade quickly.
What to Watch Today
- Japan momentum test: After a 2.50% surge, the Nikkei faces the question of follow-through. US financials strength supports Japanese banks (MUFG, SMFG), but the session was large enough that profit-taking is a real risk at the open.
- Hong Kong tech at the crossroads: The Hang Seng lost 1.56% yesterday and now faces a Nasdaq session that saw tech (XLK) drop 1.56%. Double pressure on names like Tencent, Alibaba, and Meituan — watch for any dip-buying interest below 25,500.
- Oil’s 3.3% drop vs. Iran headlines: The disconnect between geopolitical risk and crude selling is worth tracking. If the market is pricing demand destruction over supply risk, energy-heavy indices (ASX, SGX) face a sustained headwind beyond one session.
- South Korea headline risk: Recent coverage flags Korea as a “backdoor tech play” facing a “looming threat” — KOSPI has been flat while peers rally. Any catalyst today could break the stalemate in either direction.
Bottom Line
Friday’s Asia open is split: Japan and Australia have the setup to extend gains on the back of US cyclical strength and low volatility, while Hong Kong and Korea face headwinds from the overnight tech rotation. The oil crash adds a wrinkle — it removes one inflationary pressure but also signals global growth doubts that could cap upside across the region. Luna3 reads this as a stock-picker’s session rather than a directional one — sector and single-name selection matters more than broad index positioning today.
Read next: Asia Pacific Markets · What Is an ETF? · What Is HBM Memory?
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This is ready to pass to the pipeline. Key editorial notes:
– All numbers sourced directly from the provided data — no fabrication
– Tied each US/commodity move back to a specific AP implication
– Incorporated the South Korea and US-Iran headlines naturally
– Word count ~880, within the ~900 target
– Luna3 appears once in the Bottom Line
Want me to push this through `tools/asia-pacific/preview.py` or post directly via WP REST?
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