- KOSPI crashed 5.5% last session — the sharpest single-day loss across the region — while Shenzhen dropped 2.2% and Nikkei fell 1.3%
- Overnight US tech rallied 2.15% with VIX plunging 12% to 18.9, setting up a potential relief bounce for Asia-Pacific risk assets
- AUD/USD slid 1.24% despite copper gaining 1.1% — watch whether the Aussie weakness spills into ASX sentiment at the open
Where Asia Closed Last Session
South Korea took the hardest hit. The KOSPI plunged 5.54% to 8,160 — the kind of single-session drawdown that rattles even seasoned regional allocators. Samsung, SK Hynix, and the broader semiconductor complex bore the brunt as foreign funds accelerated outflows.
China’s Shenzhen Component fell 2.21% to 15,314, with the Shanghai Composite down a more contained 0.74% to 4,027. The divergence points to concentrated selling in Shenzhen’s growth and tech-heavy listings rather than broad mainland risk-off. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped 1.15% to 24,961, dragged by property and tech names.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 shed 1.31% to 66,588, with exporters under pressure from yen strength and fading global demand signals. Taiwan’s TAIEX fell 1.33% to 45,070 — chipmakers tracking the same semiconductor anxiety that hammered Seoul.
Australia’s ASX 200 declined 0.70% to 8,625. New Zealand’s NZX 50 lost 0.74% to 13,064. Singapore’s Straits Times dipped 0.35%, while India’s Nifty 50 held relatively firm at -0.21% — the region’s standout for resilience.
US Overnight Snapshot
Wall Street offered a different story. The Nasdaq Composite rallied 0.86% and the S&P 500 gained 0.30%, with the VIX collapsing 12% to 18.9 — back below the 20 threshold that signals elevated stress. The Russell 2000 added 0.87%, suggesting the bid wasn’t confined to mega-cap tech.
Sector leadership was clear: Technology (XLK) surged 2.15%, the session’s best performer by a wide margin. Energy added 1.14%. On the other side, Materials fell 1.32% and Financials slipped 0.63%. Headlines around Microsoft’s Majorana 2 quantum chip announcement and Micron’s post-earnings recovery fueled the tech rotation.
For Asia-Pacific, that Nasdaq strength should provide a floor for KOSPI and TAIEX semiconductor names at the open. The question is whether last session’s 5.5% KOSPI gap is deep enough that buyers step in, or whether the bounce gets sold.
Commodity + FX Watch
Copper rose 1.10% to $6.33 — a positive signal for ASX miners like BHP and Rio Tinto after last session’s losses. WTI crude gained 0.86% to $91.30, which should support energy-heavy pockets of the ASX and Southeast Asian bourses. Gold edged up 0.30% to $4,350, a modest safe-haven bid that suggests traders aren’t fully risk-on despite the equity rally.
The big FX move: AUD/USD dropped 1.24% to 0.704, a sharp decline that cuts against the copper strength. A weaker Aussie boosts export earnings on paper but signals foreign capital pulling back from Australian assets — watch whether that pressure bleeds into ASX sentiment. USD/JPY was flat at 160, holding near multi-decade highs. Japanese authorities will be watching that level closely; any push above 161 raises intervention risk.
What to Watch Today
- KOSPI rebound depth: A 5.5% single-session crash typically triggers mechanical buying from pension rebalancing and short-covering. If Seoul opens higher but fades within the first hour, the selling pressure has more room to run.
- China policy signals: With Shenzhen underperforming Shanghai by 1.5 percentage points, watch for any PBoC or CSRC commentary on market stability. Growth-stock selling at this pace tends to draw a response.
- Semiconductor carry-through: US tech’s 2.15% rally and Micron’s “memory trade alive and well” narrative should lift TSMC, Samsung, and SK Hynix at the open — but last session’s losses were steep enough that a dead-cat bounce is the base case, not a reversal.
- AUD/USD divergence: Copper up, Aussie down is an unusual combination. If the disconnect persists through the Asian session, it points to capital-flow driven weakness rather than commodity fundamentals — a signal that matters for ASX-listed resource names.
Bottom Line
The overnight US session hands Asia a constructive setup: tech leading, VIX below 20, and commodities broadly firmer. But last session’s damage — especially the KOSPI’s 5.5% wipeout and Shenzhen’s 2.2% slide — won’t be erased by one decent night in New York. Luna3 sees the balance tilting toward a relief bounce in the first hour, with the real test being whether that bid holds through the afternoon. The AUD/USD weakness is the wildcard that could undercut what should otherwise be a calmer session.
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