
The Hong Kong stock exchange opened lower on Tuesday, following negative pressure in global markets as investors reassessed the valuation of the artificial intelligence (AI) sector and awaited the direction of US interest rate policy. The Hang Seng Index (HSI) fell around 1.3% at the start of the session, moving to around 26,027 points. This decline extended the correction trend in the Asian region, in line with the decline on Wall Street. The technology sector was again the biggest drag on the index, with shares of giants such as Xiaomi, Li Auto, and Meituan each falling between 2% and...
The Hang Seng Index plunged 305 points, or 1.2%, to close at 25,525 on Tuesday, after posting two consecutive days of gains amid widespread losses. Sentiment worsened after US index futures fell sharply following President Trump's firing of Fed Chair Lisa Cook and his threat of "200% tariffs" on China if rare earth magnet exports were restricted. Trump also vowed to retaliate against countries that regulate major US technology companies. The index retreated from a nearly four-year high on growing concerns that mainland Chinese stocks might weaken after a month-long rally that lifted the...
European stocks traded sharply lower on Tuesday, with the Stoxx 50 down by around 1%. French stocks tumbled as political turmoil deepened after Prime Minister Francois Bayrou called a Sept. 8 confidence vote that could topple the government. The CAC 40 fell 1.9%, dragging down European benchmarks, while the FTSE 100 slipped 0.6% on reopening after a holiday. Opposition parties, including the far-right National Rally, France Unbowed, and the Greens, vowed to vote against Bayrou, leaving the government vulnerable. Broader European markets remain under pressure from sluggish growth and...
The Nikkei 225 Index dropped 0.97% to close at 42,394, while the broader Topix Index fell 1.08% to 3,072 on Tuesday, snapping a two-day advance and mirroring overnight weakness on Wall Street as investors locked in profits after last week's rally. Market sentiment was also dented by renewed trade tensions after US President Donald Trump reportedly threatened to impose "200% tariffs or something" on China if it failed to export rare-earth magnets to the US. Adding to uncertainty, Trump announced the removal of Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook over alleged mortgage fraud, raising fresh...
Hong Kong stocks fell 98 points, or 0.4% to 25,734 in Tuesday morning's session, snapping a two-day rally after Wall Street closed lower as traders weighed U.S. President Trump's tariff threats. Trump reportedly warned of "200% tariffs or something" on China if it limits rare-earth magnet exports, and vowed retaliation against countries targeting U.S. Big Tech, calling such moves "discriminatory." The Hang Seng pulled back from its highest in almost four years as caution grew ahead of China's January–July industrial profit data, with sentiment weighed by trade frictions, weak demand, and...
Nikkei Drops 0.6%, Dragged by Electronics, Pharma Stocks Japanese stocks are lower as uncertainty over U.S. tariffs and their impact on earnings continues. Electronics and pharmaceutical stocks are leading declines. Renesas Electronics is down 2.0% and Daiichi Sankyo is 1.9% lower. USD/JPY is at 147.27, compared with 147.17 as of Monday's Tokyo stock market close. Investors are focusing on any developments related to the war in Ukraine and domestic politics. The Nikkei Stock Average is down 0.6% at 42536.55. Source: Bloomberg