- 8035 led Japan with a +13.39% move on 2026-06-03
- 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
Nikkei smashes through 68,000 on AI chip frenzy while India IT stocks crater on automation fears.
| ASX 200 | Australia | ▲ +0.70% |
| Nikkei 225 | Japan | ▲ +2.50% |
| Hang Seng | Hong Kong | ▼ -1.56% |
| Shanghai Composite | China | ▲ +0.22% |
| Taiwan TAIEX | Taiwan | ▲ +1.98% |
| KOSPI | South Korea | ▲ +0.15% |
| Straits Times Index | Singapore | ▲ +0.59% |
| Nifty 50 | India | ▼ -0.50% |
Japan’s Nikkei 225 topped 68,000 for the first time, surging 2.5% as AI-linked semiconductor names led a broad rally following Wall Street’s latest record close. Tokyo Electron exploded 13.4% higher and Advantest gained 5.9%, pulling Taiwan’s TAIEX up nearly 2% in sympathy. The AI momentum that lifted Northeast Asia crushed India’s IT outsourcers — TCS plunged 8.5% after Anthropic’s Mythos AI model raised fears that advanced coding agents could erode demand for traditional services.
Hong Kong was the session’s clear laggard, with the Hang Seng dropping 1.6% as Strait of Hormuz tensions deepened after Secretary of State Rubio warned Iran had mined large segments of the waterway. Oil climbed above $94 WTI, weighing on energy-importing markets. China’s services PMI printed 54.4 — a three-month high — but couldn’t lift Hong Kong sentiment, and mainland indices barely moved.
The cross-border theme was stark: AI as creator and destroyer in the same session — chip equipment makers surged while legacy IT services sold off hard.
Here are the standout movers across Asia-Pacific’s major exchanges for the session of Wednesday, June 3, grouped by market.
Australia (ASX)
↑ NST +3.23%
Mid-cap · 21.71 (local)
Why: Elliott Investment Management disclosed an A$1 billion activist stake (~4% of equity), demanding a strategic review and calling for a new external CEO after a pattern of operational misses.
Pattern: Classic activist-catalyst breakout — stock gapped on the disclosure and remains elevated. Watch for mean-reversion if Elliott’s demands stall, but activist gold plays tend to hold a floor.
↓ FMG -1.84%
Large-cap · 21.92 (local)
Why: No specific headline — likely weighed by softer Australian Q1 GDP (0.3% q/q, below consensus) and rising oil costs pressuring iron ore miners’ cost outlook amid Strait of Hormuz tensions.
Pattern: Continuation of recent drift lower — FMG has underperformed the ASX 200 on China demand uncertainty. Move looks like macro drag rather than a discrete catalyst; not a breakdown signal yet.
Hong Kong (HKEX)
↑ 1299 +0.18%
Large-cap · 82.25 (local)
Why: Marginal gain in a weak Hong Kong session — AIA benefited from a Zacks industry spotlight highlighting life insurers. Defensive posture as investors rotated away from growth into quality large-caps.
Pattern: Flat-to-positive in a down-1.6% index reads as relative strength. AIA is acting as a defensive anchor — typical of late-cycle rotation into quality insurers when geopolitical risk rises.
↓ 9618 -4.16%
Large-cap · 115.1 (local)
Why: JD.com extended a multi-day losing streak — now down in 9 of the last 10 sessions. Broader China e-commerce sentiment soured amid Hang Seng weakness and DeepSeek’s $7.4B funding round shifting AI capital away from consumer tech.
Pattern: Momentum breakdown — falling into the trend with increasing velocity. The 12% drawdown over 10 sessions suggests capitulation selling; watch for a volume spike reversal but no floor visible yet.
China — Shanghai (SSE)
↑ 601857 +1.78%
Large-cap · 10.85 (local)
Why: PetroChina rallied as oil prices climbed on Strait of Hormuz mining fears — WTI rose above $94. The LNG Canada Phase 2 LNTP news added a secondary positive catalyst for energy infrastructure sentiment.
Pattern: Macro-driven energy trade — PetroChina tracks crude closely and the geopolitical premium is providing tailwind. Move fits a sector rotation into energy defensives amid Middle East escalation.
↓ 600519 -1.94%
Mega-cap · 1282 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — Kweichow Moutai drifted lower on continued domestic consumption concerns. Baijiu demand sentiment remains fragile despite the services PMI beat, as consumer confidence stays muted.
Pattern: Moutai has been range-bound for months with a downward bias. The 1.9% drop looks like mean-reversion within the range rather than a trend break — watch the ¥1,250 support level.
China — Shenzhen (SZSE)
↑ 002415 +0.07%
Mid-cap · 30.77 (local)
Why: Hikvision essentially flat on the day — no clear catalyst. The +0.07% move is noise in an otherwise quiet Shenzhen session for the surveillance equipment maker.
Pattern: Non-event move — below any meaningful signal threshold. Hikvision has been consolidating in a tight range; today’s micro-gain tells us nothing directionally.
↓ 002594 -2.00%
Large-cap · 94.82 (local)
Why: BYD pulled back 2% despite posting record overseas sales of 160,644 units in May (+80.4% y/y). Profit-taking after a strong run and broader valuation reassessment weighed on shares.
Pattern: Healthy pullback within an uptrend — the sell-the-news reaction to strong delivery data is a common pattern for BYD. Analysts still have a consensus target near ¥119, well above current levels.
Japan (TSE)
↑ 8035 +13.39%
Mid-cap · 6.09e+04 (local)
Why: Tokyo Electron surged 13.4% as the AI chip equipment boom drove the Nikkei above 68,000 for the first time. Global semiconductor capex cycle is accelerating and TEL is the direct pick-and-shovel play.
Pattern: Explosive momentum continuation on record volume — this is the classic AI-cycle breakout pattern seen across the semiconductor equipment chain. Gap-and-go with no resistance overhead at new highs.
↓ 9984 -3.67%
Mega-cap · 8315 (local)
Why: SoftBank fell 3.7% after hitting an all-time high near ¥8,630 earlier in the week — profit-taking after the recent rally. Arm CEO’s bullish AI chip revenue target wasn’t enough to sustain momentum.
Pattern: Mean-reversion pullback from an overextended all-time high. SoftBank’s beta to AI sentiment cuts both ways — the stock ran hard into the ¥8,600 zone and is now digesting gains. Normal correction.
Singapore (SGX)
↑ C6L +3.98%
Mid-cap · 7.06 (local)
Why: Singapore Airlines rallied 4% — no clear single catalyst but likely benefiting from travel demand resilience and potential oil hedging gains as crude prices rise on Strait of Hormuz concerns.
Pattern: Strong relative performance in a modestly positive Singapore session suggests institutional accumulation. Airlines with fuel hedges can paradoxically benefit from oil spikes — SIA fits that profile.
↓ H78 -1.06%
Mid-cap · 7.46 (local)
Why: Hongkong Land dipped 1% — no specific headline. Likely reflecting broader Hong Kong property sentiment drag and mild risk-off rotation in Singapore’s REIT-adjacent names.
Pattern: Minor pullback within a low-volatility range — not a significant signal. Hong Kong property exposure remains a headwind for the stock; move is sector-level drift, not stock-specific.
South Korea (KOSPI)
↑ 035420 +3.31%
Mid-cap · 2.805e+05 (local)
Why: Naver rose 3.3% — no specific headline but South Korea’s largest internet platform likely caught a bid from the broader Asian tech rally led by Japan’s AI chip names and positive risk appetite.
Pattern: Sympathy move with the regional tech rally — Naver tends to track sentiment in the broader Northeast Asian internet complex. The move breaks a recent consolidation range and could signal resumption.
↓ 006400 -7.67%
Mid-cap · 6.02e+05 (local)
Why: Samsung SDI plunged 7.7% — the battery maker continues to face collapsing margins (gross margin fell to 5.5% last quarter) and revenue declining over 22% year-on-year as the EV battery cycle slows.
Pattern: Accelerating downtrend on deteriorating fundamentals — this is a momentum breakdown, not mean-reversion. The stock has been in freefall as profitability collapses; no floor visible until margin stabilization.
Taiwan (TWSE)
↑ 3711 +4.75%
Mid-cap · 618 (local)
Why: ASE Technology gained 4.75% riding the regional semiconductor wave as Taiwan’s TAIEX surged nearly 2%. The chip packaging and testing firm benefits directly from rising AI chip production volumes.
Pattern: Sector momentum play — ASE is a second-derivative AI beneficiary through advanced packaging demand. The move aligns with Tokyo Electron’s breakout and the broader semi-equipment rally across Northeast Asia.
India (NSE)
↑ ICICIBANK +1.39%
Large-cap · 1244 (local)
Why: ICICI Bank gained 1.4% bucking the broader Indian market sell-off — private sector banks acted as a defensive rotation destination as investors dumped IT stocks and sought domestic-demand plays.
Pattern: Relative outperformance during a sector rotation day — financials absorbing flows out of IT is a classic defensive pivot. ICICI’s domestic lending franchise is insulated from the AI disruption theme.
↓ TCS -8.46%
Mega-cap · 2240 (local)
Why: TCS crashed 8.5% — India’s largest IT outsourcer led a sector-wide rout after Anthropic’s Mythos AI model raised fears that advanced coding agents could structurally reduce demand for traditional IT services.
Pattern: Gap-down panic selling on a thematic shock — the IT index fell 5.8%, its worst day in four months. This is a sector-level de-rating event, not company-specific. Watch for stabilization around prior support.
New Zealand (NZX)
↑ FPH +0.27%
Large-cap · 36.9 (local)
Why: Fisher & Paykel Healthcare edged up 0.27% — no clear catalyst. The medtech company held steady in a quiet New Zealand session, acting as a defensive hold in a volatile regional backdrop.
Pattern: Minimal move below any meaningful signal threshold. FPH trades as a low-beta defensive name on the NZX; the slight green print reflects its safe-haven status rather than any directional conviction.
↓ AIR -2.33%
Large-cap · 0.42 (local)
Why: Air New Zealand slipped 2.3% — no specific headline but rising oil prices on Strait of Hormuz tensions are a headwind for airlines, particularly those with limited fuel hedging programs.
Pattern: Oil-sensitivity trade — Air NZ’s thin margins amplify crude price moves. The stock has been range-bound near multi-year lows; the dip fits the broader pattern of unhedged carriers selling off when Brent rises.
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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