
The Hang Seng Tech Index fell 1% to 5,521, indicating renewed pressure on Hong Kong technology stocks in the latest trading session. This decline reflects a more cautious sentiment towards the technology sector, as the index's movement was dominated by selling in large-cap tech companies, which are typically the main movers. With this weakening, market participants will be watching to see whether the index can hold the 5,500-plus area or whether it opens up room for further correction in the near term. (asd) Source: Newsmaker.id
The Nikkei 225 index closed down 1.2% to 49,544.21 on Tuesday, dragged down by a defensive market mood ahead of tonight's US economic data release. Market participants tended to reduce risk, making selling easier to emerge despite the lack of major "bad news" from Japan. The wait-and-see sentiment grew stronger as the (slightly delayed) US jobs data was seen as potentially altering the direction of Fed interest rate expectations, while this week also featured a busy central bank calendar—including the Bank of Japan, which is widely expected to raise interest rates. This combination made...
Hong Kong shares dropped 371 points, or 1.4%, to 25,258 Tuesday morning's session, extending steep losses from the previous day as all sectors retreated. Risk appetite was burdened by declines in mainland markets after weak November data showed fragile industrial output and retail turnover amid soft external demand and shaky domestic conditions. Local equities neared their lowest in a week, following a negative lead from Wall Street, where AI and tech weakness persisted. Losses were partly offset by domestic data showing Hong Kong's manufacturing output rose for a fourth straight quarter in...
Asia-Pacific stock markets mostly opened lower on Tuesday, following Wall Street's overnight decline. Pressure stemmed from investors exiting artificial intelligence (AI) stocks in the United States. Oracle shares plunged more than 5%, Broadcom fell more than 2%, while Microsoft also posted losses. In the US, the S&P 500 index fell 0.16%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell slightly, and the tech-dominated Nasdaq Composite Index fell 0.59%. In Asia, market movements were mixed. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 Index opened up 0.14%. However, preliminary purchasing managers' index (PMI)...
Japan's Nikkei stock index opened 1.1% lower at 49,624.20 in early trading, following Wall Street's sharp decline overnight. Market participants remained cautious due to the busy data schedule and economic agenda throughout the week. According to IG Chief Market Analyst Chris Beauchamp, investor risk appetite remains low, leading to market volatility. Pressure also came from artificial intelligence-related stocks, as the Nasdaq Composite Index in the United States weakened. Japanese technology stocks were also affected, with Yaskawa Electric plunging 5.5%, Fujikura down 5.1%, and Japan...
The S&P 500 and the Dow Jones added 0.1% and 0.2%, respectively, while the Nasdaq fell 0.2% as a tech-led tumble erased early gains and left markets awaiting clearer macro direction. Heavyweights tied to the AI theme, including Broadcom (-5.6%), Oracle (-2.6%), and several semiconductor names, weighed on performance after Broadcom flagged margin pressures and Oracle delivered softer guidance, reviving concerns over the profitability and financing of large-scale AI investments. ServiceNow's 11.6% plunge following reports of a sizable acquisition and a KeyBanc downgrade added to...