- Sharp US tech selloff overnight (Nasdaq -2.2%, XLK -4.1%) threatens to erase Monday's strong gains across TAIEX, Shenzhen, and Nikkei
- Copper crashed 3.6% and oil fell 2.5% — ASX miners and energy names face direct headwinds at the open
- China mainland rallied hard Monday (Shanghai +1.8%, Shenzhen +2.1%) but Hang Seng diverged at -0.65%, signaling selective risk appetite
Asia closed Monday on a wave of tech-fueled optimism — Taiwan surged nearly 3%, China’s mainland indices posted their best session in weeks, and Tokyo powered higher — but the overnight US session just threw cold water on that momentum, with the Nasdaq dropping over 2% on a brutal semiconductor selloff that will test every gain the region banked 24 hours ago.
Where Asia Closed Yesterday
Taiwan’s TAIEX was the regional star, jumping 2.75% as semiconductor heavyweights caught a bid. China’s mainland bourses followed closely — the Shenzhen Component surged 2.13% and the Shanghai Composite climbed 1.78%, marking a broad-based rally that extended beyond the usual state-backed names into growth and tech. Japan’s Nikkei 225 added 1.55%, supported by yen weakness keeping exporter margins attractive at USD/JPY near 162.
South Korea’s KOSPI gained 0.69%, and India’s Nifty 50 edged up 0.37% — both positive but lacking the conviction seen in Greater China and Japan. Singapore’s Straits Times Index was barely changed at +0.22%.
The outliers were telling. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 0.65% even as mainland indices rallied — a divergence that suggests offshore investors are pricing risk differently from onshore participants. Australia’s ASX 200 slipped 0.14%, weighed by commodity softness, while New Zealand’s NZX 50 dropped 0.35%.
US Overnight Snapshot
Wall Street delivered a sharp reality check for tech bulls. The Nasdaq Composite fell 2.21%, with the tech-heavy QQQ ETF dropping 3.29%. The S&P 500 lost 1.44%. The catalyst was a semiconductor rout — Micron and Sandisk led the decline in what headlines called a “gut-check moment” for AI stocks. Cerebras posted its first earnings report and the stock couldn’t hold. Intel’s CEO warned investors to temper expectations.
The VIX spiked 12.8% to 19.5 — not yet above the 20 fear threshold, but knocking on the door. The sector breakdown was stark: Technology (XLK) crashed 4.14%, while Financials gained 0.34% and Energy added 0.74%. That defensive rotation signals institutional de-risking from growth into value.
For Asia, the read-through is direct. TAIEX’s 2.75% Monday gain was built on the same semiconductor names now under pressure in New York. HKEX-listed tech and Japan’s chip equipment makers face gap-down risk at the open.
Commodity + FX Watch
Commodities sold off across the board. Copper dropped 3.64% — the sharpest move in the complex — and will weigh directly on ASX miners like BHP and Rio Tinto at the Sydney open. WTI crude fell 2.50% to $72.90, pressuring energy names across the region. Gold retreated 1.41% despite the equity weakness, suggesting this was a broad risk-reduction move rather than a flight to safety.
In FX, the Australian dollar slipped 0.12% against the greenback to 0.699, staying just below the psychologically important 0.70 level — a headwind for ASX-listed companies with USD-denominated revenues. USD/JPY held steady near 162, keeping the yen weak enough to cushion Japanese exporters from the equity selloff. The dollar recovered broadly after ECB President Lagarde struck a dovish tone, which could pressure EUR-linked Asian trade flows.
What to Watch Today
- Taiwan and Japan semiconductor names at the open. TSMC, Tokyo Electron, and Advantest will reveal whether Monday’s gains can hold after the Micron-led US selloff erased 4.1% from the XLK sector index overnight. Early bid-ask spreads will set the tone for the entire region.
- Hang Seng divergence from mainland. Monday’s split — Shanghai up 1.78% while the Hang Seng fell 0.65% — could widen if offshore investors use the US tech rout as a reason to further reduce Hong Kong exposure. Watch Alibaba and Tencent for directional cues.
- ASX materials sector under pressure. Copper’s 3.64% crash and oil’s 2.5% decline put BHP, Rio Tinto, Woodside, and Santos squarely in the crosshairs. The ASX was already red on Monday; today could accelerate that.
- VIX trajectory. At 19.5, the fear gauge is one bad headline away from breaching 20. If US futures weaken further during the Asian session, expect defensive positioning to dominate — utilities and REITs over tech and growth.
Bottom Line
The overnight setup is clearly risk-off for Asia’s Wednesday session. Monday’s tech-driven rally across Taiwan, China, and Japan now faces a direct stress test from Wall Street’s sharpest semiconductor selloff in weeks, compounded by a commodity complex that’s offering no safe harbor. Luna3 sees the balance of risk tilted toward give-back today — the question is whether mainland China’s domestic bid is strong enough to hold its ground while the rest of the region reprices around it.
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