- 035420 led South Korea with a -11.67% move on 2026-06-10
- Covered 10 exchanges — 9 with notable gainers, 10 with notable decliners
- Includes ASX, HKEX, mainland China, TSE, SGX, KOSPI, TWSE, NSE, and NZX coverage
Session at a Glance
KOSPI extends explosive 2026 rally while SoftBank crashes 8% on stalled OpenAI loan.
| ASX 200 | Australia | ▲ +0.33% |
| Nikkei 225 | Japan | ▲ +0.24% |
| Hang Seng | Hong Kong | ▼ -1.01% |
| Shanghai Composite | China | ▲ +0.86% |
| Taiwan TAIEX | Taiwan | ▼ -0.64% |
| KOSPI | South Korea | ▲ +3.29% |
| Straits Times Index | Singapore | ▼ -0.00% |
| Nifty 50 | India | ▲ +0.99% |
South Korea’s KOSPI surged 3.3% as the chip-fuelled rally that has doubled the index in 2026 powered on — Samsung and SK Hynix remain the heavyweights pulling capital into Seoul. The momentum contrasted sharply with Japan, where SoftBank cratered 8.3% after Bloomberg reported its $6 billion OpenAI margin loan had stalled, dragging the Nikkei to a muted +0.24% despite strength in semiconductor equipment names like Tokyo Electron.
Hong Kong underperformed again, the Hang Seng slipping 1% as financials like HSBC extended losses tied to Beijing’s tightening capital controls on mainland-to-offshore bank accounts. Mainland China itself was resilient at +0.86%, with banks and consumer appliance makers bid while battery giant CATL gave back nearly 3%.
The session’s cross-border theme was clear: semiconductor and AI-adjacent names attracted aggressive dip-buying across Tokyo, Seoul, and Taipei, while financials exposed to China’s capital-flow crackdown remained under pressure in Hong Kong and Singapore.
Here are the standout movers across Asia-Pacific’s major exchanges for the session of Wednesday, June 10, grouped by market.
Australia (ASX)
↑ COL +4.95%
Mid-cap · 23.73 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst in recent headlines — Coles Group rallied nearly 5% in a defensive consumer-staples bid as the ASX session traded quietly higher on broad risk-on tone.
Pattern: Defensive rotation pattern — supermarket stocks often catch a bid when macro uncertainty lifts and funds rebalance into steady cash-flow names. Watch for mean-reversion if sector fades.
↓ NST -3.54%
Mid-cap · 18.54 (local)
Why: Northern Star Resources fell 3.5% with no company-specific headline — likely tracking a softer gold price as risk appetite improved across Asia-Pacific equities.
Pattern: Gold miners tend to inverse risk-on sessions. The pullback fits a momentum-pause pattern after gold’s strong run; watch support at the 50-day moving average for a bounce setup.
Hong Kong (HKEX)
↑ 9999 +3.79%
Mid-cap · 194.4 (local)
Why: NetEase gained 3.8% after multiple Wall Street analyst upgrades, including a Strong Buy rating citing 35% upside and attractive valuation relative to gaming peers.
Pattern: Analyst-catalyst breakout from consolidation — upgrades on a beaten-down China tech name can trigger institutional re-rating flows. Momentum continuation likely if volume confirms.
↓ 0005 -4.79%
Mega-cap · 135.3 (local)
Why: HSBC dropped 4.8% as the fallout from Beijing’s crackdown on mainland-to-offshore bank accounts continued to weigh on Hong Kong-listed financials exposed to cross-border capital flows.
Pattern: Macro-policy overhang driving sector-wide de-rating — not an isolated move. HSBC, AIA, and StanChart are all under the same capital-controls cloud. Trend reversal needs a policy signal.
China — Shanghai (SSE)
↑ 601166 +2.38%
Mid-cap · 18.89 (local)
Why: Industrial Bank rose 2.4% with no specific headline — Chinese bank stocks caught a bid as the Shanghai Composite rallied 0.86%, possibly on expectations of further PBoC easing or loan-growth data.
Pattern: Sector rotation into mainland financials while HK-listed banks sell off is a notable divergence. Onshore banks benefit from domestic policy support; momentum continuation if rate-cut talk builds.
↓ 601857 -0.97%
Large-cap · 10.24 (local)
Why: PetroChina edged down 1% with no company-specific catalyst — energy names lagged the broader Shanghai rally as oil prices remained range-bound amid mixed global demand signals.
Pattern: Mild underperformance in a risk-on tape is a relative-weakness signal for energy. Defensive oil majors tend to lag when growth and tech sectors attract the bid. Not a breakdown.
China — Shenzhen (SZSE)
↑ 000333 +1.87%
Large-cap · 83.9 (local)
Why: Midea Group rose 1.9% with no specific headline — China’s largest home-appliance maker likely benefited from broad domestic consumption optimism as mainland indices pushed higher.
Pattern: Consumer-discretionary momentum continuation — Midea has been a steady compounder. The move is consistent with sector rotation into quality domestic demand plays. No breakout signal yet.
↓ 300750 -2.75%
Mega-cap · 388.5 (local)
Why: CATL fell 2.75% despite news of its big energy-storage push — profit-taking after a strong run as the world’s largest battery maker faces margin pressure from overcapacity in China’s EV supply chain.
Pattern: Mega-cap mean-reversion pullback. CATL has been volatile around strategic pivots; the energy-storage bet is long-term bullish but near-term supply-glut fears cap upside. Watch for support.
Japan (TSE)
↑ 8035 +3.19%
Mid-cap · 6.183e+04 (local)
Why: Tokyo Electron surged 3.2% as semiconductor equipment names caught aggressive dip-buying — chip stocks rebounded globally and the company recently posted record net sales on AI server demand.
Pattern: Classic sector-dip buy pattern. Tokyo Electron is a bellwether for global WFE capex; the bounce aligns with the broader chip rebound theme visible across Seoul and Taipei this session.
↓ 9984 -8.33%
Mega-cap · 6461 (local)
Why: SoftBank crashed 8.3% after Bloomberg reported its $6 billion OpenAI margin loan had stalled — lenders struggled to price a private AI stake as collateral, raising funding-risk concerns.
Pattern: News-driven gap-down on financing risk. SoftBank’s NAV story depends on unlisted AI holdings; when the collateral pathway narrows, the discount widens. Watch for dead-cat bounce attempts.
Singapore (SGX)
↑ A17U +2.45%
Mid-cap · 2.51 (local)
Why: CapitaLand Ascendas REIT rose 2.45% with no specific headline — Singapore REITs likely caught a bid on the prospect of easing rate pressures and stable industrial property demand.
Pattern: Rate-sensitive REIT rebound pattern — when bond yields dip or rate-cut expectations firm, high-yield REITs attract income-seeking flows. Momentum continuation if macro supports.
↓ D05 -3.00%
Mega-cap · 61.85 (local)
Why: DBS Group fell 3% as Southeast Asian bank stocks tracked the regional financial-sector weakness, with spillover pressure from China’s capital-controls crackdown weighing on Asia-exposed lenders.
Pattern: Sector contagion from the HK financials selloff — DBS has China/HK exposure through its wealth management arm. The move mirrors HSBC’s decline. Isolated from Singapore domestic fundamentals.
South Korea (KOSPI)
↓ 035420 -11.67%
Mid-cap · 2.27e+05 (local)
Why: NAVER plunged 11.7% in a sharp reversal — the internet platform is giving back gains from its recent Nvidia partnership rally as capital rotates aggressively into semiconductor hardware names.
Pattern: Rotation-driven selloff within a ripping market. KOSPI’s 100% YTD gain is concentrated in chip heavyweights; non-semiconductor tech is being used as a funding source. Classic momentum divergence.
Taiwan (TWSE)
↑ 2382 +1.47%
Mid-cap · 380.5 (local)
Why: Quanta Computer edged up 1.5% as AI server assembly demand continued to support Taiwan’s ODM/OEM supply chain — the stock benefits from the same hyperscaler capex wave driving the global chip rally.
Pattern: AI-infrastructure momentum continuation. Quanta is a direct beneficiary of Nvidia GPU server builds; the modest gain amid a down TAIEX tape signals relative strength worth monitoring.
↓ 2308 -8.90%
Mid-cap · 2200 (local)
Why: Delta Electronics tumbled 8.9% in a sharp selloff — the power-management and EV-charging component maker was caught in a broader profit-taking wave across Taiwan’s tech-industrial names.
Pattern: High-beta tech correction after a strong run. Delta trades at a premium valuation; when the TAIEX pulls back, richly priced industrials get hit hardest. Mean-reversion candidates if fundamentals hold.
India (NSE)
↑ HINDUNILVR +2.09%
Large-cap · 2177 (local)
Why: Hindustan Unilever rose 2.1% with no specific headline — India’s largest FMCG company likely benefited from defensive rotation and improving rural demand expectations as monsoon season approaches.
Pattern: Defensive-staples bid in a rising Nifty tape. HUL often leads when institutional investors seek quality large-cap exposure with stable earnings visibility. Steady compounder, not a breakout.
↓ WIPRO -0.66%
Large-cap · 180.5 (local)
Why: Wipro slipped 0.66% with no specific headline — Indian IT services names continue to underperform as global enterprise tech spending remains cautious and US client budget uncertainty lingers.
Pattern: Sector-wide underperformance in Indian IT is a multi-quarter theme. The small decline is noise rather than signal. No catalyst for reversal until US tech-spending guidance improves.
New Zealand (NZX)
↑ MEL +1.38%
Mid-cap · 5.88 (local)
Why: Meridian Energy gained 1.4% with no specific headline — the renewable electricity generator likely traded higher on steady domestic power demand and the broader defensive-utility bid across Australasia.
Pattern: Low-volatility utility momentum. Meridian’s hydro generation profile makes it a bond proxy; the move fits a quiet risk-on session where yield-sensitive names drift higher. No breakout setup.
↓ AIR -3.41%
Large-cap · 0.425 (local)
Why: Air New Zealand dropped 3.4% extending its 2026 downtrend — the airline reported a first-half loss of NZ$40M and analysts have issued sell ratings citing higher engine-lease costs and full-year loss forecasts.
Pattern: Fundamental deterioration driving trend continuation. Jarden has a sell rating with a NZ$134M full-year loss forecast. The stock is in a wide falling channel — not a dip-buy candidate yet.
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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