- Hang Seng led Asia higher yesterday at +1.14% while Shenzhen dropped -1.16% — watch for that divergence to resolve as China reopens
- US tech sold off hard overnight with Nasdaq 100 down -1.85% and XLK -2.39%, setting up pressure on Asian semiconductor and AI-linked names
- Oil surged +5.69% after US strikes on Iran — energy names across ASX and Asian bourses could gap higher at the open
Where Asia Closed Yesterday
Hong Kong was the clear winner. The Hang Seng rallied +1.14% to 23,616, outperforming every other major index in the region. India’s Nifty 50 followed with a solid +0.66% close at 24,430, and Singapore’s Straits Times Index added +0.30%.
The rest of the region leaned red. Japan’s Nikkei 225 was essentially flat at 69,738, down a negligible -0.01%. Australia’s ASX 200 slipped -0.15% to 8,831. The Shanghai Composite edged lower by -0.06%, but the real weakness came from the Shenzhen Component, which dropped -1.16% — the sharpest decline across Asia and a signal that mainland China’s growth and small-cap tech names are under pressure even as Hong Kong holds up.
South Korea’s KOSPI fell -0.46% and Taiwan’s TAIEX dropped -0.48%, both reflecting the semiconductor supply chain’s sensitivity to the broader tech rotation that’s now playing out on Wall Street. New Zealand’s NZX 50 closed today’s session down -0.40% at 13,709.
The divergence between Hong Kong strength and Shenzhen weakness is worth tracking — it suggests offshore capital is positioning differently from domestic mainland flows.
US Overnight Snapshot
Wall Street delivered a clear tech-led pullback. The Nasdaq Composite fell -1.16%, the Nasdaq 100 ETF dropped -1.85%, and the Technology sector (XLK) was the worst performer at -2.39%. The S&P 500 lost -0.45%. The Russell 2000 slid -0.91%, showing the weakness wasn’t confined to mega-cap tech.
Micron’s selloff on memory market peaking concerns and a sharp AI-related debt selloff — triggered by Amazon looking to borrow another $25 billion — drove the risk-off tone. The VIX rose +3.60% to 16.1, elevated but not in panic territory.
Energy was the lone bright spot, with XLE surging +2.84% after the US launched strikes on Iran and cancelled its license to sell oil. That geopolitical escalation repriced crude and lifted the entire energy complex.
For Asia, the tech weakness maps directly onto TSMC suppliers in Taiwan, Samsung-linked names in Korea, and HKEX-listed internet and chip stocks. Energy-heavy indices like the ASX could see offsetting support from the crude rally.
Commodity + FX Watch
Oil is the headline. WTI crude surged +5.69% to $72.40 on the Iran strikes — a move that hasn’t been fully priced into Asian energy names yet. ASX oil producers (Woodside, Santos) and HKEX-listed CNOOC should see buying interest at the open.
Gold pulled back -1.11% to ~$4,110, a counterintuitive move given the geopolitical escalation, likely driven by dollar strength and position unwinding. Copper was flat at -0.14%, offering no directional signal for ASX miners.
AUD/USD edged up +0.26% to 0.696, though one headline flagged reasons to sell the Australian dollar — watch whether that narrative gains traction. USD/JPY was steady at 162, keeping pressure on Japanese exporters who benefit from yen weakness. The strong dollar backdrop remains a headwind for emerging Asia currencies broadly.
What to Watch Today
- Iran escalation spillover: The US strikes on Iran and oil license cancellation are the single biggest overnight catalyst. Asian energy stocks will reprice at the open, and any further headlines on Iran’s response could swing risk sentiment mid-session.
- Tech contagion from Nasdaq: TSMC, Samsung, and HKEX tech names face direct read-through from the Nasdaq 100’s -1.85% drop. Micron’s memory market concerns hit SK Hynix and Samsung Memory exposure specifically.
- Shenzhen weakness vs. Hang Seng strength: Yesterday’s -1.16% Shenzhen drop against Hong Kong’s +1.14% gain is an unusual spread. If mainland selling continues, it could drag Hong Kong lower despite offshore positioning. Watch the A/H premium for signals.
- ASX energy vs. materials divergence: Oil’s +5.69% surge supports energy names, but US Materials (XLB) fell -0.90% and copper was flat. ASX miners may lag while energy names lead — a sector rotation worth monitoring within the index.
Bottom Line
The overnight setup leans risk-off for Asia’s tech-heavy markets — Korea, Taiwan, and HKEX internet names will feel the Nasdaq drag at the open. But the oil surge creates a pocket of strength for energy-exposed indices, particularly the ASX and Hong Kong resource names. The Iran escalation is the wild card: any further military action or diplomatic response during Asian hours could override the technical setup entirely. Luna3 sees a split session ahead — defensive positioning in tech, opportunistic in energy.
Read next: Asia Pacific Markets · What Is an ETF? · What Is HBM Memory?
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.
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!