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Asia-Pacific Top Movers: Tuesday, June 9

Asia-Pacific Top Movers: Tuesday, June 9

Asia-Pacific top movers cover image for June 09, 2026

Asia-Pacific Top Movers: Tuesday, June 9

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Key PointsAbout This Summary iAn AI tool helped create this summary based on the text of the article. The Luna3 team has checked it for accuracy and revised as necessary. Read more about how we use AI in our publishing process.
  • 000660 led South Korea with a +15.91% move on 2026-06-09
  • Covered 10 exchanges — 10 with notable gainers, 9 with notable decliners
  • Includes ASX, HKEX, mainland China, TSE, SGX, KOSPI, TWSE, NSE, and NZX coverage

Session at a Glance

KOSPI rockets 8% on Jensen Huang dip-buying call as semiconductor stocks surge across North Asia.

ASX 200 Australia ▼ -0.24%
Nikkei 225 Japan ▲ +2.17%
Hang Seng Hong Kong ▼ -0.37%
Shanghai Composite China ▲ +1.28%
Taiwan TAIEX Taiwan ▲ +2.76%
KOSPI South Korea ▲ +8.18%
Straits Times Index Singapore ▲ +1.10%
Nifty 50 India ▲ +0.28%

South Korea’s KOSPI surged 8.2% in a dramatic snapback after Friday’s circuit-breaker crash, triggered by NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang’s Seoul visit where he called the chip selloff a “buying opportunity at a discount.” A buy-side sidecar was activated as KOSPI 200 futures hit the 5% limit-up. SK Hynix jumped nearly 16% and Samsung rallied 8%, dragging the broader index back above 8,000.

The semiconductor rebound radiated across North Asia — Taiwan’s TAIEX gained 2.8% led by MediaTek, Tokyo Electron surged 9% in Japan lifting the Nikkei 2.2%, and Shanghai’s Composite added 1.3% with CATL firmer. Laggards told a different story: iron ore-sensitive names bled in Australia after Simandou export data showed Guinea shipments doubling to 2.2Mt in May, pressuring Fortescue down 3.8%. India’s banks outperformed on RBI’s new FCNR(B) forex swap facility while IT names like Infosys slipped.

The cross-border theme is unmistakable: AI/memory semiconductor exposure was the session’s alpha factor, while old-economy commodity and platform plays lagged.

Here are the standout movers across Asia-Pacific’s major exchanges for the session of Tuesday, June 9, grouped by market.

Australia (ASX)

↑ WOW +2.21%

Large-cap · 36.48 (local)

Why: No clear catalyst in headlines — Woolworths likely benefited from defensive rotation as investors shifted out of iron ore miners and into consumer staples amid commodity weakness.

Pattern: Classic risk-off rotation pattern — staples outperform when resource stocks sell off. Move is modest and consistent with sector rebalancing rather than a breakout signal.

↓ FMG -3.80%

Large-cap · 19.75 (local)

Why: Fortescue dropped as Guinea’s Simandou iron ore exports doubled to 2.2 million tonnes in May, raising global supply fears and pushing iron ore futures toward two-month lows near US$101/t.

Pattern: Continuation of a supply-driven downtrend — Simandou ramp is structural headwind for Pilbara miners. FMG’s high cost sensitivity to iron ore price makes it the highest-beta play on this theme.

Hong Kong (HKEX)

↑ 6098 +1.86%

Mid-cap · 5.48 (local)

Why: No specific headline — CG Services (Country Garden property services) likely caught a modest bid from broader mainland-linked sentiment as Shanghai rallied 1.3% on tech strength.

Pattern: Low-conviction bounce within a longer downtrend for property-adjacent names. The 1.9% move doesn’t signal a trend reversal — more likely mean-reversion noise in a thin mid-cap.

↓ 1299 -2.27%

Large-cap · 71 (local)

Why: AIA Group slipped 2.3% with no specific catalyst — likely pressured by rising US Treasury yields post-strong jobs data, which hurts long-duration insurance book valuations.

Pattern: Rate-sensitivity drag rather than company-specific news. AIA tends to underperform when US yields spike. Move fits a macro-driven mean-reversion setup if yields stabilize.

China — Shanghai (SSE)

↑ 601318 +1.03%

Large-cap · 53.93 (local)

Why: Ping An Insurance rose modestly alongside Shanghai’s 1.3% broad advance — financials participated in the risk-on rebound driven by overnight chip strength and policy optimism.

Pattern: Index-tracking move rather than idiosyncratic breakout. Ping An’s beta to Shanghai Composite is high. The 1% gain simply mirrors the benchmark — no standalone momentum signal here.

↓ 601857 -5.57%

Large-cap · 10.34 (local)

Why: PetroChina dropped 5.6% as crude oil prices remained under pressure and investors rotated aggressively out of old-economy energy into technology and semiconductor names during the broad risk-on session.

Pattern: Sharp sector rotation — capital fled energy for semis. PetroChina’s decline on a day Shanghai rallied 1.3% signals active rebalancing. Contra-trend moves this large in a mega-cap often mean-revert within days.

China — Shenzhen (SZSE)

↑ 300750 +1.65%

Mega-cap · 399.5 (local)

Why: CATL edged up 1.7% despite the Pentagon adding BYD and others to its China military-linked list — the EV battery giant was not directly named, and investors treated the headline as noise for battery supply chain.

Pattern: Resilience through negative headline noise is a bullish signal. CATL is trading with momentum continuation; the Pentagon list headlines hit peers harder while CATL’s dominant battery market position keeps bids firm.

↓ 000858 -1.06%

Large-cap · 79.11 (local)

Why: Wuliangye Yibin dipped 1% with no specific catalyst — Chinese baijiu/liquor stocks have been weak as consumer spending data underwhelms and the growth-over-value rotation favors tech.

Pattern: Sector rotation drag — consumer discretionary/luxury consumption names are losing flows to tech and semis. The move is small and fits ongoing underperformance rather than a breakdown.

Japan (TSE)

↑ 8035 +8.91%

Mid-cap · 5.992e+04 (local)

Why: Tokyo Electron surged 8.9% riding the global semiconductor equipment rebound after Jensen Huang’s dip-buying call and overnight US chip stock recovery. A ¥150B buyback program and stock split added tailwinds.

Pattern: Textbook momentum continuation — the buyback + split announcement layered onto a sector-wide catalyst creates a powerful setup. TEL’s 33% guided sales growth makes it a high-conviction AI capex proxy.

↓ 6501 -2.96%

Large-cap · 4882 (local)

Why: Hitachi fell 3% despite announcing an Intel foundry partnership — the decline likely reflects profit-taking after a massive multi-year rally, with the stock up over 170% in the past year.

Pattern: Sell-the-news pattern on the Intel partnership headline. When a stock has run this hard, even positive catalysts trigger distribution. The divergence from surging semis suggests Hitachi’s IT/infra mix didn’t catch the pure-play chip bid.

Singapore (SGX)

↑ Z74 +2.61%

Large-cap · 4.32 (local)

Why: SingTel rose 2.6% — Singapore’s largest telecom likely benefited from the broader regional tech rally and its indirect AI exposure through data centre and enterprise connectivity demand.

Pattern: Momentum spillover from the North Asia tech rally into ASEAN telecom/infrastructure plays. Move is sector-rotation adjacent rather than company-specific — watch for follow-through above recent highs.

South Korea (KOSPI)

↑ 000660 +15.91%

Large-cap · 2.215e+06 (local)

Why: SK Hynix surged 15.9% as the KOSPI snapped back from Friday’s circuit-breaker crash. Jensen Huang’s Seoul dip-buying call, a new NVIDIA-SK Hynix AI memory partnership, and Micron’s overnight rebound fueled the rally.

Pattern: V-shaped reversal after panic selling — the buy-side sidecar trigger confirms institutional demand. SK Hynix is the highest-beta play on HBM/AI memory. The snap from -15% to +16% in two sessions is a momentum regime shift signal.

↓ 035420 -7.89%

Mid-cap · 2.57e+05 (local)

Why: Naver dropped 7.9% despite its NVIDIA sovereign AI infrastructure partnership — classic sell-the-news reaction after the stock rallied 9% on the announcement while the broader KOSPI crashed on Friday.

Pattern: Sell-the-news reversal — Naver rallied into Friday’s crash on the NVIDIA deal, then gave it all back as capital rotated into pure-play semiconductor names. Platform/internet lagged hardware in this session’s chip-driven bid.

Taiwan (TWSE)

↑ 2454 +9.95%

Large-cap · 4475 (local)

Why: MediaTek surged 10% on the back of Mizuho’s buy-the-dip upgrade and the broader semiconductor rebound. As a leading mobile/AI chip designer, it caught the full force of the North Asia chip rally.

Pattern: Momentum breakout supported by analyst catalyst — Mizuho’s upgrade provides fundamental cover for the technical bounce. MediaTek’s AI edge-chip exposure makes it a consensus buy-the-dip target alongside TSMC.

↓ 2382 -0.40%

Mid-cap · 375 (local)

Why: Quanta Computer was flat at -0.4% — the server/notebook ODM lagged the chip rally, suggesting the dip-buying bid was concentrated in semiconductor designers and equipment, not downstream assemblers.

Pattern: Underperformance versus the TAIEX’s 2.8% gain signals relative weakness. Hardware assembly margins are tighter than chip design, so capital preferences were clear. No standalone pattern — just sector pecking-order dynamics.

India (NSE)

↑ SBIN +2.30%

Large-cap · 1004 (local)

Why: State Bank of India rose 2.3% after the RBI launched a new FCNR(B) dollar-rupee forex swap facility for overseas borrowings, expected to boost NRI deposit inflows and improve banks’ funding costs.

Pattern: Policy-driven sector catalyst — RBI swap facilities historically lift bank stocks in the short term. SBI as the largest public-sector bank is the highest-beta play on this policy. Watch for follow-through if deposit flow data confirms uptake.

↓ INFY -1.22%

Mega-cap · 1173 (local)

Why: Infosys slipped 1.2% with no company-specific catalyst — Indian IT services names continue to underperform as capital rotates into banks on the RBI swap news and global tech flows favor hardware over services.

Pattern: Relative underperformance within a flat Nifty session points to sector rotation out of IT services. Infosys is a defensive large-cap that typically lags in risk-on environments where banks and industrials lead.

New Zealand (NZX)

↑ AIR +6.02%

Large-cap · 0.44 (local)

Why: Air New Zealand jumped 6% with no specific headline — the move may reflect short-covering or speculative positioning in this beaten-down airline name trading near multi-year lows around NZ$0.44.

Pattern: Oversold bounce from depressed levels — AIR.NZ has been a persistent underperformer. A 6% pop on no news in a thin small-cap is more likely short-covering or speculative than a sustainable trend reversal.

↓ SPK -2.63%

Mid-cap · 1.85 (local)

Why: Spark New Zealand fell 2.6% with no specific catalyst — the telecom utility name likely faced mild selling pressure as investors rotated toward higher-beta opportunities in the risk-on session.

Pattern: Defensive-to-cyclical rotation drag — Spark’s yield-stock profile makes it a source of funds when risk appetite returns. The move is small and fits a broader pattern of utilities lagging in risk-on sessions.

Reading the Session

The exchange-by-exchange breakdown above surfaces both market-specific catalysts and cross-border themes. When multiple exchanges move together, look for a macro driver (USD move, commodity price, risk-on/off shift). Isolated single-exchange moves tend to reflect local earnings, regulatory news, or sector rotation.

Read next: Asia Pacific Markets · What Is a P/E Ratio? · What Is a Dividend?

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