- 002415 led China — Shenzhen with a +4.85% move on 2026-06-16
- 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
Nikkei smashes 70,000 and KOSPI surges 7% as BOJ hike and Iran deal ignite risk-on frenzy.
| ASX 200 | Australia | ▲ +1.29% |
| Nikkei 225 | Japan | ▲ +5.13% |
| Hang Seng | Hong Kong | ▼ -0.91% |
| Shanghai Composite | China | ▲ +1.50% |
| Taiwan TAIEX | Taiwan | ▲ +3.71% |
| KOSPI | South Korea | ▲ +7.42% |
| Straits Times Index | Singapore | ▲ +1.75% |
| Nifty 50 | India | ▲ +1.46% |
Asia-Pacific markets exploded higher on Tuesday after two catalysts collided: the Bank of Japan raised rates to 1% — the highest since 1995 — and the US-Iran interim deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz crushed oil prices and unleashed a wave of risk appetite. The Nikkei 225 broke through 70,000 for the first time in history, completing a 60,000-to-70,000 sprint in under two months.
South Korea’s KOSPI led the region with a jaw-dropping +7.4% session as semiconductor heavyweights SK Hynix and Samsung surged on a DRAM breakout call and renewed confidence in the AI memory supercycle. Taiwan’s TAIEX rode the same chip wave, up 3.7% with MediaTek rallying on reports of a Google TPU and Musk AI rack pivot. Hong Kong was the notable outlier — the Hang Seng slipped 0.9% as Tencent and China tech names sold off, possibly reflecting profit-taking after the prior week’s recovery bounce.
The cross-border theme is unmistakable: semiconductors and geopolitical de-escalation drove gains from Tokyo to Seoul to Taipei, while gold-linked names in Singapore caught a bid from the Hormuz deal and the city-state’s new gold-clearing infrastructure push.
Here are the standout movers across Asia-Pacific’s major exchanges for the session of Tuesday, June 16, grouped by market.
Australia (ASX)
↑ NST +2.45%
Mid-cap · 21.3 (local)
Why: Northern Star Resources gained alongside gold prices, which jumped after the US-Iran Hormuz Strait deal reshaped geopolitical risk premiums and boosted safe-haven metals demand.
Pattern: Gold miners tend to ride macro-driven bullion surges with beta — this looks like a momentum continuation move within a broader gold-positive macro backdrop, not an isolated event.
↓ TCL -1.82%
Mid-cap · 15.07 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst for Transurban’s decline — likely reflects defensive names lagging as risk appetite surged toward cyclicals and growth sectors in a strong risk-on session.
Pattern: Classic sector rotation: toll-road utilities underperform when markets pivot hard into growth and commodities. Mean-reversion likely if the risk-on frenzy fades, but no breakout signal here.
Hong Kong (HKEX)
↑ 0005 +0.14%
Mega-cap · 146 (local)
Why: HSBC edged higher on reports Allianz is leading the race to acquire its Singapore insurance arm, signalling portfolio simplification. London finance job cuts from AI also keep the cost-efficiency narrative alive.
Pattern: Marginal +0.14% move in a down Hang Seng session is relative outperformance — HSBC’s asset-disposal story provides a floor. No technical breakout signal; more of a defensive hold pattern.
↓ 0700 -2.65%
Mega-cap · 447.4 (local)
Why: Tencent dropped 2.65% as Hong Kong tech lagged the broader Asia rally — likely profit-taking after the prior week’s recovery bounce, compounded by Enflame’s IPO approval adding domestic AI chip competition noise.
Pattern: Hang Seng was the session’s clear underperformer. Tencent’s sell-off looks like a momentum divergence from the broader Asia tech rally — watch for mean-reversion if regional sentiment stays positive.
China — Shanghai (SSE)
↑ 600030 +1.45%
Mid-cap · 27.25 (local)
Why: CITIC Securities rose with the broader Shanghai market as risk-on sentiment and higher trading volumes lifted brokerage names. No firm-specific catalyst — this is a beta play on market activity.
Pattern: Chinese brokerages are high-beta proxies for domestic equity turnover. The +1.45% move tracks the Shanghai Composite’s +1.5% session — a sector-rotation tailwind, not a standalone breakout.
↓ 601318 -2.29%
Large-cap · 52.99 (local)
Why: Ping An Insurance fell 2.29% despite the positive Shanghai session — no clear headline driver. Likely reflects rotation out of financials into growth and tech names on the risk-on day.
Pattern: Insurance stocks often lag in aggressive risk-on sessions as capital chases higher-beta tech and cyclical plays. Isolated underperformance in an up-market suggests sector rotation, not fundamental deterioration.
China — Shenzhen (SZSE)
↑ 002415 +4.85%
Mid-cap · 32.2 (local)
Why: Hikvision surged 4.85% — no firm-specific headline, but Chinese AI and surveillance tech names caught a bid as the broader semiconductor and AI theme swept across Asia-Pacific markets.
Pattern: Strong outperformance versus the Shenzhen index suggests momentum accumulation in China’s AI hardware chain. The +4.85% move with no specific catalyst could signal institutional re-rating or thematic rotation into AI plays.
↓ 000333 -2.43%
Large-cap · 78.96 (local)
Why: Midea Group dropped 2.43% with no clear headline — likely defensive consumer appliance names being sold to fund rotation into higher-beta tech and AI plays during the risk-on session.
Pattern: Mirrors Ping An’s pattern: large-cap consumer defensives lagging in a growth-led rally. This looks like sector rotation rather than a technical breakdown — check whether the move holds or reverses.
Japan (TSE)
↑ 7974 +1.52%
Mega-cap · 7218 (local)
Why: Nintendo gained 1.52% as the Nikkei broke 70,000. After a 37.9% slide over the past year, bargain-hunting and broad risk-on flows appear to be drawing buyers back into the name.
Pattern: A +1.52% move after a prolonged 38% drawdown looks like early-stage mean-reversion. Nintendo underperformed the Nikkei’s +5.13% session, so this isn’t momentum leadership — more of a beta catch-up.
↓ 8035 -2.61%
Mid-cap · 7.086e+04 (local)
Why: Tokyo Electron fell 2.61% despite the massive Nikkei rally — unusual divergence. The BOJ’s rate hike to 1% may have hit yen-sensitive exporters with high foreign revenue exposure harder than domestic names.
Pattern: Selling a semiconductor equipment name on a day when global chip stocks surged is a red flag for idiosyncratic positioning. Watch for whether this is a one-day BOJ-rate-shock reaction or the start of a deeper rotation.
Singapore (SGX)
↑ O39 +2.19%
Large-cap · 24.23 (local)
Why: OCBC climbed 2.19% after being named as one of six clearing members for Singapore’s new OTC gold-clearing system alongside JPMorgan and Deutsche Bank — a direct infrastructure revenue catalyst.
Pattern: News-driven move that aligns OCBC with Singapore’s strategic push into Asian gold trading. The gold-clearing announcement is a structural tailwind, not a one-day trade — momentum continuation likely if the system launches on schedule.
↓ H78 -2.28%
Mid-cap · 7.27 (local)
Why: Hongkong Land fell 2.28% — no firm-specific catalyst. Hong Kong-exposed property names likely dragged by the Hang Seng’s -0.91% session and continued weakness in HK commercial real estate sentiment.
Pattern: HK property developers have been a persistent underperformer. The decline on a positive regional day reinforces the bearish trend — no breakout or mean-reversion signal here, just continued sector drag.
South Korea (KOSPI)
↑ 000660 +4.11%
Large-cap · 2.382e+06 (local)
Why: SK Hynix surged 4.11% as DRAM prices staged what analysts called a ‘solid breakout’ — the move came alongside US memory peers WDC, MU, STX rallying hard and the broader KOSPI’s 7.4% moonshot session.
Pattern: This is the epicentre of the Asia semiconductor momentum theme. SK Hynix is up 775% in 52 weeks on the AI memory supercycle. The DRAM breakout call adds a fresh technical catalyst to an already vertical trend.
↓ 035420 -2.42%
Mid-cap · 2.42e+05 (local)
Why: Naver fell 2.42% despite the KOSPI’s historic +7.4% session — no clear headline. Likely reflects narrow market breadth with capital concentrated in semiconductor names like SK Hynix and Samsung.
Pattern: Declining on the strongest KOSPI session in months is a bearish divergence signal. Internet platform names being left behind in a chip-led rally echoes the narrow-breadth concern analysts have flagged for Korean equities.
Taiwan (TWSE)
↑ 2454 +2.01%
Large-cap · 4560 (local)
Why: MediaTek rose 2.01% after analyst Ming-Chi Kuo reported the company is eyeing Google TPU and Elon Musk’s AI rack deals as part of a system-level business pivot beyond mobile chipsets.
Pattern: MediaTek is up 184% YTD on the AI chip theme. The Google TPU / xAI rack report adds a new revenue vector to the story — momentum continuation with a fundamental catalyst upgrade. Watch for follow-through.
↓ 2382 -2.03%
Mid-cap · 362.5 (local)
Why: Quanta Computer dipped 2.03% with no specific headline — possible profit-taking in an ODM/server assembler that has already run hard on AI infrastructure buildout expectations this year.
Pattern: Mild pullback in an overbought AI supply chain name during a broad up session. Likely a one-day digestion, not a trend reversal — unless the selling accelerates into earnings season.
India (NSE)
↑ RELIANCE +1.78%
Mega-cap · 1330 (local)
Why: Reliance Industries gained 1.78% as falling crude oil prices from the US-Iran Hormuz deal directly benefit India’s largest private refiner by improving input cost margins.
Pattern: Reliance is a classic beneficiary of lower oil — the Hormuz deal is a macro catalyst that directly improves its refining spread. Momentum continuation likely while the geopolitical de-escalation narrative holds.
↓ SBIN -0.93%
Large-cap · 1011 (local)
Why: State Bank of India slipped 0.93% — no specific headline. Indian banks may be seeing mild profit-taking after the Nifty’s recent run, with rate-sensitive financials cooling as the broader market rotates into energy and tech.
Pattern: A sub-1% decline in a +1.46% Nifty session is mild underperformance, not a breakdown. Likely rotation-driven rather than fundamental — check broader banking sector flows for confirmation.
New Zealand (NZX)
↑ MEL +3.10%
Mid-cap · 5.98 (local)
Why: Meridian Energy rose 3.1% — no firm-specific catalyst. New Zealand utilities may have caught a bid from falling energy input costs following the US-Iran deal’s impact on global crude prices.
Pattern: A +3.1% move in a typically low-volatility utility stock stands out. Could be a mean-reversion bounce from recent weakness or a macro-driven repricing of energy costs — isolated move without clear technical pattern.
↓ SPK -1.29%
Mid-cap · 1.91 (local)
Why: Spark New Zealand fell 1.29% — no specific catalyst. Telecom names in small markets often trade on domestic fund flows rather than macro themes, and today’s risk-on appetite likely bypassed defensive yield plays.
Pattern: Defensive telco underperforming on a risk-on day is textbook sector rotation. No breakout or breakdown signal — Spark trades as a yield proxy, and yield proxies get sold when growth leads.
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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