As Korea reopened after yesterday's holiday the catch up was brutal with falls of -5.2%, taking the KOSPI back below 6,000. High flying AI stocks which are up 50-60% year to date fell heavily with SK Hynix down over 8% and Samsung Electroncis 9%. The euphoria for AI tech stocks has seen retail buying in South Korean tech stocks increase significantly in 2026, marking a reversal from the heavy selling seen in 2025. Investors have been encouraged by authorities to redirect capital away from US tech into local names to support the industry.
China's bourses are all down despite earlier attempts by the Hang Seng to rally. Falls are modest for the major indexes, the exception being the tech heavy Shenzhen down -1.3%. Technology & Semiconductor names saw sharp losses. Investors are pivoting away from growth-heavy tech stocks due to fears that rising energy costs will fuel global inflation, potentially delaying anticipated interest rate cuts.
Oil price rises hit the NKY today with airlines and autos hit hard whilst refiners fell over 5% on news that the Straits of Hormuz was shut. Banks continued where they left off Monday with heavy falls whilst defense stocks saw a sharp reversal as traders locked in profits after massive gains on hopes of increased military spending.
SE Asian bourses are outperforming the region today with modest gains. The FTSE Malay is up +0.8% given the surge in oil prices dragging Singapore, and Jakarta with it. The SE Thai in Malaysia ignored the signals falling as rising oil prices are expected to hit an already struggling tourist industry.
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Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Miki Bowman said Friday that while she didn't elect to cut rates in January, she could be ready to cut in March. She made clear that she saw 3 cuts this year in the December Dot Plot (as MNI had assumed), making her one of the biggest doves on the Committee. (speech text here)
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The Wall Street Journal reports that President Trump will nominate Brett Matsumoto as the next Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The role has not been filled since Trump fired Commissioner McEntarfer in September shortly after weaker-than-expected nonfarm payrolls report, accusing her of manipulating the data for political reasons.