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Asia-Pacific Top Movers: Tuesday, June 30

Asia-Pacific Top Movers: Tuesday, June 30

Asia-Pacific top movers cover image for June 30, 2026

Asia-Pacific Top Movers: Tuesday, June 30

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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.
  • 051910 led South Korea with a -9.09% move on 2026-06-30
  • Covered 10 exchanges — 9 with notable gainers, 9 with notable decliners
  • Includes ASX, HKEX, mainland China, TSE, SGX, KOSPI, TWSE, NSE, and NZX coverage

Session at a Glance

Taiwan surges 2.5% as semiconductor names rip higher on memory-shortage tailwinds and AI capex momentum.

ASX 200 Australia ▼ -0.51%
Nikkei 225 Japan ▲ +0.86%
Hang Seng Hong Kong ▼ -0.63%
Shanghai Composite China ▲ +0.50%
Taiwan TAIEX Taiwan ▲ +2.50%
KOSPI South Korea ▲ +0.97%
Straits Times Index Singapore ▼ -0.53%
Nifty 50 India ▼ -0.07%

Semiconductor stocks drove a sharp divergence across Asia-Pacific on Monday. Taiwan’s TAIEX jumped 2.5% — its best session in weeks — led by MediaTek and the broader chip supply chain as investors priced in a memory shortage that Samsung warns will persist into 2028. South Korea’s KOSPI rose nearly 1% on the same theme, with Samsung Electronics rallying over 3%. Japan’s Nikkei added 0.86%, helped by a yen sitting at 39-year lows that juiced exporter earnings expectations.

The session’s losers told a different story. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng slipped 0.63% as energy names like CNOOC dragged, and Australia’s ASX 200 lost half a percent with gold miners under pressure after bullion fell below $3,990. India’s Nifty 50 was flat, weighed by continued IT-sector weakness following Accenture’s guidance cut earlier this month.

The cross-border theme was clear: anything tied to AI infrastructure and memory demand attracted bids, while old-economy energy and commodity plays faced selling.

Here are the standout movers across Asia-Pacific’s major exchanges for the session of Tuesday, June 30, grouped by market.

Australia (ASX)

↑ CBA +0.62%

Mega-cap · 164.6 (local)

Why: No clear catalyst — Commonwealth Bank outperformed a weak ASX session on defensive rotation into financials as gold and materials dragged the broader index lower.

Pattern: Relative strength in a down-tape session is a classic quality-flight signal — CBA tends to attract flows when miners sell off, consistent with sector rotation rather than breakout.

↓ NST -5.82%

Mid-cap · 18.95 (local)

Why: Gold fell below $3,990 as rate-hike expectations firmed, pressuring miners. Northern Star also faces Elliott activist demands and cut 2026 volume guidance, amplifying the sell-off.

Pattern: Down nearly 6% in one session extends a 20% drawdown from recent highs — this is momentum continuation to the downside, not mean-reversion territory yet. Watch for capitulation volume.

Hong Kong (HKEX)

↑ 0700 +2.28%

Mega-cap · 429.8 (local)

Why: Tencent rallied 2.28% as the company ramped buybacks to support its share price after a broader $309 billion rout in Chinese tech. Buyback floor provided a bid in a weak Hang Seng session.

Pattern: Buyback-driven bounces in a secular downtrend often produce multi-day dead-cat rallies. Tencent outperforming the Hang Seng by nearly 3 percentage points suggests institutional accumulation, but needs follow-through.

↓ 0883 -3.61%

Large-cap · 20.32 (local)

Why: CNOOC fell 3.6% as crude oil prices remained soft and investors rotated out of energy into tech. The stock is down significantly from its 52-week high of HK$31 despite solid production growth.

Pattern: Breakdown below recent support with the stock trading near the lower end of its 52-week range. Sector-wide energy weakness across Asia suggests macro headwind rather than company-specific issue.

China — Shanghai (SSE)

↑ 600030 +0.84%

Mid-cap · 28.73 (local)

Why: CITIC Securities edged higher as mainland financials caught a modest bid with the Shanghai Composite up 0.5%. No company-specific catalyst — likely benefiting from broader A-share flows into brokerages.

Pattern: Small move within a consolidation range. Chinese brokerage stocks tend to move with market turnover expectations — a 0.84% gain is noise unless accompanied by volume expansion.

↓ 601857 -2.69%

Large-cap · 8.68 (local)

Why: PetroChina dropped 2.7% in line with the global energy sell-off. Crude weakness and a broader sector rotation into tech and AI-linked names pressured oil majors across the region.

Pattern: Move fits a sector-rotation pattern: capital leaving energy for semiconductors and AI plays across Asia. PetroChina’s decline mirrors CNOOC in Hong Kong, confirming the theme is regional.

China — Shenzhen (SZSE)

↑ 002415 +3.67%

Mid-cap · 34.2 (local)

Why: Hikvision rose 3.67% as Chinese tech and AI-adjacent names caught bids. The surveillance and smart-systems maker benefits from domestic AI infrastructure buildout narratives gaining traction.

Pattern: Momentum continuation within the broader China AI trade. Hikvision often moves with sentiment on domestic tech self-sufficiency — the +3.67% is part of a sector theme, not isolated.

↓ 000333 -2.25%

Large-cap · 75.53 (local)

Why: Midea Group fell 2.25% — no specific headline, but Chinese consumer appliance and home-goods names lagged as capital rotated into tech. Broader consumer demand concerns weighed.

Pattern: Profit-taking in a consumer-cyclical name as growth capital rotates to semis and AI. Classic sector-rotation pattern — Midea’s decline is the funding source for tech rallies.

Japan (TSE)

↑ 6861 +3.66%

Large-cap · 8.106e+04 (local)

Why: Keyence rallied 3.66% as factory-automation demand stays strong and the weak yen at 39-year lows boosts export-heavy industrials. The company’s AI-powered inspection tools also attract tech-adjacent flows.

Pattern: Momentum breakout attempt — Keyence is bouncing off its May highs. Weak-yen tailwind plus automation capex cycle makes this a macro-driven continuation trade, not mean-reversion.

↓ 7974 -1.73%

Mega-cap · 6815 (local)

Why: Nintendo fell 1.73% as post-game-showcase weakness continued. Investors remain cautious after the June event disappointed on marquee franchise titles and the Switch 2 pricing backlash persists.

Pattern: Downtrend continuation — Nintendo has been sliding since its June 10 showcase. The stock halved from its all-time high and bounced recently, but today’s drop suggests the relief rally is fading.

Singapore (SGX)

↓ A17U -1.57%

Mid-cap · 2.5 (local)

Why: CapitaLand Ascendas REIT fell 1.57% as rising rate expectations globally pressure REIT valuations. Singapore REITs are rate-sensitive and the session reflected broader bond-proxy selling.

Pattern: Rate-sensitive sell-off in a yield play — classic inverse-rate move. REITs underperform when rate-hike expectations firm. The decline is part of a sector-wide theme, not company-specific.

South Korea (KOSPI)

↑ 005930 +3.41%

Mega-cap · 3.34e+05 (local)

Why: Samsung Electronics surged 3.41% as the global memory shortage narrative intensified. The company warned chip supply constraints won’t ease until 2028, underpinning pricing power for DRAM and NAND.

Pattern: Momentum continuation in a structural bull trend — Samsung crossed $1 trillion market cap in May and keeps grinding higher. Memory cycle upswing plus AI-driven HBM demand is a multi-quarter tailwind.

↓ 051910 -9.09%

Large-cap · 2.8e+05 (local)

Why: LG Chem dropped 9% — a sharp single-session decline suggesting either earnings concern or sector rotation out of battery and chemicals into semiconductors. No clear headline catalyst.

Pattern: A 9% single-day drop in a large-cap is abnormal and suggests forced selling or a downgrade. Check for institutional block trades or EV battery demand downgrades. Move is isolated, not sector-wide.

Taiwan (TWSE)

↑ 2454 +8.57%

Large-cap · 4245 (local)

Why: MediaTek surged 8.57% as the AI chip frenzy lifted Taiwan’s semiconductor names. The fabless chipmaker benefits from strong smartphone and edge-AI processor demand with analysts rating it a strong buy.

Pattern: Parabolic momentum — MediaTek is up massively in the first half of 2026 and this move extends the trend. Breakout continuation with the TAIEX itself up 2.5%, confirming broad-based tech bid.

India (NSE)

↑ BAJFINANCE +2.61%

Mid-cap · 1002 (local)

Why: Bajaj Finance rose 2.61% as Indian financials outperformed on steady domestic credit growth. The NBFC sector benefits from a stable rate environment and strong consumer lending demand.

Pattern: Relative strength versus a flat Nifty suggests sector rotation into financials from underperforming IT. Bajaj Finance often leads when domestic growth themes attract flows — momentum continuation.

↓ WIPRO -2.78%

Large-cap · 170.6 (local)

Why: Wipro fell 2.78% to near its 52-week low as Indian IT remains under pressure following Accenture’s guidance cut on June 18. The stock has dropped 35% over the past year on weakening US enterprise tech spend.

Pattern: Downtrend continuation — Wipro is in a sustained bear market relative to the Nifty. Accenture’s guidance created a sector-wide de-rating and Wipro keeps making new lows. No reversal signal yet.

New Zealand (NZX)

↑ MEL +1.39%

Mid-cap · 5.82 (local)

Why: Meridian Energy gained 1.39% — no clear catalyst. New Zealand utility stocks tend to trade on yield dynamics and rainfall/hydro generation outlook rather than daily headlines.

Pattern: Small move in a low-volatility utility name. Likely driven by yield-seeking flows in a rate-sensitive market. Not a breakout — just normal daily noise within a range-bound pattern.

↓ FPH -0.51%

Large-cap · 39.01 (local)

Why: Fisher & Paykel Healthcare dipped 0.51% — minimal move with no headline driver. The medical devices maker trades on global hospital capex trends and NZD currency moves.

Pattern: Negligible decline well within daily noise. FPH is a low-beta healthcare name — a half-percent dip in a soft NZX session is unremarkable and doesn’t signal any directional pattern shift.

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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