Live widget hidden — enable in cookie settings
Asia-Pacific Top Movers: Wednesday, July 1

Asia-Pacific Top Movers: Wednesday, July 1

Asia-Pacific top movers cover image for July 01, 2026

Asia-Pacific Top Movers: Wednesday, July 1

2 views     10 hours ago
8 min read
Text Size
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.
  • 005930 led South Korea with a -5.84% move on 2026-07-01
  • Covered 10 exchanges — 10 with notable gainers, 10 with notable decliners
  • Includes ASX, HKEX, mainland China, TSE, SGX, KOSPI, TWSE, NSE, and NZX coverage

Session at a Glance

TSMC powers Taiwan to near-2% gain while Samsung’s 6% plunge drags KOSPI to session lows.

ASX 200 Australia ▼ -0.64%
Nikkei 225 Japan ▲ +0.59%
Hang Seng Hong Kong ▼ -0.63%
Shanghai Composite China ▲ +0.44%
Taiwan TAIEX Taiwan ▲ +1.94%
KOSPI South Korea ▼ -2.04%
Straits Times Index Singapore ▼ -0.16%
Nifty 50 India ▲ +0.63%

The AI chip supply chain drew a sharp dividing line across Asia-Pacific on Tuesday. Taiwan’s TAIEX surged nearly 2% as TSMC rallied almost 4% on fresh Mizuho CoWoS capacity upgrades and record AI earnings momentum — the stock has more than doubled in the past year. South Korea went the other way: Samsung Electronics cratered 5.8% after analysts flagged Q2 operating profit falling below 100 trillion won on outsized incentive provisions, dragging the KOSPI down over 2%.

China was mixed but leaned constructive. The Shanghai Composite gained 0.44% as insurance heavyweight Ping An jumped 3.75% and tech-adjacent names caught a bid, while the Hang Seng slipped 0.63% on energy weakness. Tencent bucked the Hong Kong trend, climbing 2.3% after securing a multi-year $2.8 billion DRAM supply deal with CXMT to build out its AI infrastructure.

Australia’s ASX 200 shed 0.64% amid cautious sentiment, while India’s Nifty 50 added 0.63% led by consumer staples. The session’s overarching theme: markets are repricing which chipmakers will capture AI capex — and which will miss earnings doing it.

Here are the standout movers across Asia-Pacific’s major exchanges for the session of Wednesday, July 1, grouped by market.

Australia (ASX)

↑ CSL +3.16%

Mega-cap · 118.4 (local)

Why: No clear single-day catalyst — CSL has been rebounding from 52-week lows near A$90 after FY26 guidance revision, with analysts still rating the biotech as undervalued ahead of August earnings.

Pattern: Looks like a mean-reversion bounce off deeply oversold levels — the stock is trading well below its 52-week high of A$275, so relief rallies can be sharp on light newsflow.

↓ COL -4.19%

Mid-cap · 23.35 (local)

Why: No clear catalyst — Coles Group’s 4.2% drop likely reflects defensive-sector rotation out of consumer staples as broader ASX sentiment turned cautious and bond yields ticked higher.

Pattern: Isolated single-day weakness in a low-volatility name — more consistent with position unwinding or ex-date mechanics than a trend reversal. Watch for follow-through before reading signal.

Hong Kong (HKEX)

↑ 0700 +2.28%

Mega-cap · 429.8 (local)

Why: Tencent rallied after confirming a $2.8 billion multi-year DRAM supply deal with CXMT for AI server infrastructure, plus continued momentum from Weixin Pay’s international expansion push.

Pattern: Momentum continuation — Tencent is building an AI infrastructure narrative that gives the stock a second growth vector beyond gaming. The DRAM deal signals serious capex commitment investors are pricing in.

↓ 0883 -3.61%

Large-cap · 20.32 (local)

Why: CNOOC dropped 3.6% with no company-specific headline — likely tracking weaker crude oil sentiment and broader energy sector rotation in Hong Kong as tech names attracted capital.

Pattern: Sector rotation pattern: energy lagging while tech leads on AI capex headlines. CNOOC’s move is directionally consistent with Hang Seng underperformance driven by old-economy heavyweights.

China — Shanghai (SSE)

↑ 601318 +3.75%

Large-cap · 49.53 (local)

Why: Ping An Insurance surged 3.75% as the heavily discounted valuation attracted buyers — the stock sits well below its 52-week high of ¥74.88, with a consensus Strong Buy and 8.2% dividend yield.

Pattern: Mean-reversion from deeply oversold territory with fundamental support — 17 analysts at Strong Buy, wide discount to price targets around ¥78. Looks like institutional re-accumulation.

↓ 601988 -1.22%

Mid-cap · 5.65 (local)

Why: Bank of China dipped 1.2% on no specific catalyst — likely mild profit-taking in state-owned bank names after a multi-week rally in Chinese financials. Volume appeared routine.

Pattern: Low-conviction pullback in a low-beta name — not unusual for SOE banks to give back small gains on quiet days. No trend break unless follow-through selling materializes this week.

China — Shenzhen (SZSE)

↑ 300059 +5.25%

Mid-cap · 21.45 (local)

Why: East Money Information surged 5.25% — likely tracking the constructive Shanghai session and renewed retail brokerage activity as China’s A-share volumes picked up on positive PMI expectations.

Pattern: Brokerage stocks are high-beta proxies for market sentiment in China. East Money’s outsized move on a day Shanghai gained only 0.44% suggests leveraged retail participation is accelerating.

↓ 300750 -2.33%

Mega-cap · 383.8 (local)

Why: CATL dropped 2.3% as the battery giant pulled back from recent highs near ¥392 with no specific headline — likely sector rotation away from EV supply chain into AI-adjacent tech names.

Pattern: Healthy consolidation within a broader uptrend — CATL is still well above its 52-week low of ¥249. The pullback aligns with the session’s AI-over-EV rotation theme visible across Asia.

Japan (TSE)

↑ 7974 +2.42%

Mega-cap · 6980 (local)

Why: Nintendo gained 2.4% amid renewed media M&A speculation after NBCU gaming tie-up headlines surfaced, adding to the AI-fatigue rotation into consumer entertainment names on the TSE.

Pattern: Sector rotation beneficiary — Nintendo has been catching bids as a non-AI Japanese large-cap whenever semiconductor names wobble. The media M&A chatter adds a speculative premium layer.

↓ 4519 -3.36%

Mid-cap · 7281 (local)

Why: Chugai Pharmaceutical fell 3.4% on no clear catalyst — likely profit-taking in Japan’s healthcare sector after a strong run, with capital rotating toward entertainment and tech names.

Pattern: Isolated pullback in a defensive name during a risk-on session for Japanese equities. Nikkei gained 0.59% led by consumer cyclicals, suggesting pharma underperformance is rotational, not fundamental.

Singapore (SGX)

↑ Z74 +0.91%

Large-cap · 4.45 (local)

Why: Singtel edged up 0.9% on steady telco demand — no specific headline, but the stock continues to benefit from its data centre and regional connectivity buildout narrative across Southeast Asia.

Pattern: Low-volatility grind higher in a defensive yield name. Sub-1% moves in Singtel are noise, but the stock’s steady bid reflects income investors parking capital as regional sentiment stays mixed.

↓ A17U -1.20%

Mid-cap · 2.46 (local)

Why: CapitaLand Ascendas REIT slipped 1.2% — no catalyst, but Singapore REITs broadly weakened as US Treasury yields stayed elevated, pressuring rate-sensitive income vehicles across the region.

Pattern: Rate-sensitivity trade — REIT weakness when bond yields are firm is textbook. A17U’s move is directionally consistent with the global rates backdrop rather than any property-specific issue.

South Korea (KOSPI)

↑ 000270 +2.54%

Mid-cap · 1.415e+05 (local)

Why: Kia Corporation gained 2.5% despite the KOSPI selloff — likely benefiting from sector rotation out of semiconductors into Korea’s auto exporters, which are less exposed to AI earnings risk.

Pattern: Defensive rotation within a weak market — auto names acting as a safe haven while Samsung and chip stocks get repriced. Kia’s outperformance by 8 percentage points vs KOSPI signals strong relative demand.

↓ 005930 -5.84%

Mega-cap · 3.145e+05 (local)

Why: Samsung Electronics plunged 5.8% after analysts projected Q2 operating profit below ₩100 trillion due to outsized incentive payment provisions, reigniting concerns about AI investment profitability.

Pattern: Earnings revision-driven selloff in a mega-cap that anchors the entire KOSPI. The 5.8% single-day drop on pre-earnings downgrades often triggers follow-through selling as funds de-risk ahead of July 23 results.

Taiwan (TWSE)

↑ 2330 +3.94%

Mega-cap · 2505 (local)

Why: TSMC surged 3.9% after Mizuho raised CoWoS advanced packaging capacity forecasts on surging server CPU demand — the stock now accounts for over 40% of the TAIEX and has doubled in a year.

Pattern: Momentum continuation on structural AI demand — TSMC’s high-performance computing is 61% of revenue and advanced nodes 74% of wafer sales. Analyst upgrades are reinforcing, not leading, the trend.

↓ 2317 -1.20%

Large-cap · 248 (local)

Why: Hon Hai (Foxconn) slipped 1.2% despite the strong TAIEX session — likely mild profit-taking in the contract manufacturer as capital concentrated into TSMC’s purer AI semiconductor exposure.

Pattern: Relative underperformance within a strong tape suggests capital is becoming more selective about AI beneficiaries — pure-play chipmaking (TSMC) over assembly (Hon Hai). Divergence worth watching.

India (NSE)

↑ HINDUNILVR +2.99%

Large-cap · 2182 (local)

Why: Hindustan Unilever rallied 3% on no specific headline — consumer staples led the Nifty higher as rural demand recovery hopes and monsoon progress supported the FMCG sector broadly.

Pattern: Sector-wide consumer staples bid in India, consistent with domestic rotation into defensives. HUL often leads when macro optimism for rural India improves — check monsoon updates for confirmation.

↓ TCS -1.55%

Mega-cap · 2000 (local)

Why: TCS fell 1.55% as Indian IT services faced continued pressure from global enterprise spending caution and rotation out of tech into consumer names within the Nifty.

Pattern: Mirror image of the HUL trade — capital rotating from IT services into staples. TCS weakness on a green Nifty day is a relative-strength breakdown that often precedes further sector underperformance.

New Zealand (NZX)

↑ SPK +2.40%

Mid-cap · 1.92 (local)

Why: Spark New Zealand gained 2.4% on no clear catalyst — the telco may be attracting yield-seeking flows in a thin NZX session as investors position defensively ahead of mid-year rebalancing.

Pattern: Low-liquidity bounce in a yield stock — NZX daily volumes are thin enough that even modest institutional buying can produce outsized percentage moves. Not a high-conviction signal without follow-through.

↓ MEL -2.06%

Mid-cap · 5.7 (local)

Why: Meridian Energy slipped 2.1% — no clear catalyst, but New Zealand utilities have been consolidating after a strong H1 run as investors rotate toward higher-beta opportunities.

Pattern: Profit-taking in a defensive utility after a period of outperformance. Meridian’s pullback is modest and orderly — more consistent with portfolio rebalancing than any fundamental deterioration.

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?

AI-Augmented Stock Research

Get early access to Orbit

Orbit is Luna3.ai’s AI-augmented research engine. 12 algorithmic signals + a gradient-boosted ML model + an agentic LLM that reads each top pick’s filings and writes a daily thesis with conviction score and catalyst proximity. Three regimes, three playbooks — growth in expansion, defensives in late-cycle, recovery plays at panic bottoms. The 3 in Luna3.ai.

No spam. Unsubscribe any time.

Disclaimer

Luna3.ai content is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute personalized investment, trading, or financial advice. Some posts are researched or drafted with AI assistance and may contain mistakes; primary sources for data and claims are linked inline within each article. Always do your own research and consult a licensed advisor before making financial decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Some articles on this site contain affiliate links; if you click through and complete an action — such as opening a brokerage account — Luna3.ai may earn a commission at no cost to you. This does not influence our editorial independence.

Comments
Sort by
Top comments
Newest first
Add a comment...

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Stay ahead of the markets.