Asia Intelligence Brief — Thursday, June 4, 2026
Asian stock markets slipped on Thursday, just a day after Japan’s market hit a record high. Technology shares led the fall, and Japan’s SoftBank dropped about 11%.
The Japanese yen weakened past 160 to the US dollar, while oil prices stayed high. South Korea’s market reopened after a holiday and also fell.
Today’s Asia Intelligence Brief covers the region’s finance, markets, economy, and politics. We pulled it together from Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Hindi, Bahasa Indonesia, Vietnamese, and English sources.
Japan — A Step Back After the Record
The Market Gives Some Back
Japan’s main share index, the Nikkei 225, fell 1.36% on Thursday to 67,470.69. That came just one day after it closed at a record high.
The drop followed falls on Wall Street overnight. Technology companies were hit hardest across the region.
SoftBank Leads the Fall
The day’s biggest mover was SoftBank, the big Japanese technology investor, which dropped about 11%. A day earlier it had sold part of its stake in Lenskart, an Indian eyewear company.
SoftBank carries a lot of weight in Japan’s market, so its slide pulled the whole index down. Its size means good and bad days for the company ripple widely.
Japan — A Weaker Yen
Past 160 to the Dollar
The Japanese yen weakened past 160 to the US dollar on Thursday. A weaker yen helps Japanese exporters but makes imported goods and energy more expensive.
That matters a lot right now, with oil prices already high. Costlier imports feed straight into the prices households pay.
The Central Bank Is Watching
The head of Japan’s central bank, Kazuo Ueda, signalled that interest rates could rise if inflation risks grow. Many economists still expect a small rate increase this month.
A higher rate would offer the yen some support. The bank is trying to balance a weak currency, rising prices, and a still-fragile economy.
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South Korea — Reopening Lower
The Kospi Falls After a Holiday
South Korea’s main index, the Kospi, fell 1.84% to 8,639.41 as trading resumed after a public holiday. It gave back some ground after recently hitting a record high.
The country’s big chipmakers, Samsung and SK Hynix, slipped as part of the wider technology fall. Both had climbed strongly in recent weeks.
A Big Milestone in the Background
Even with today’s dip, South Korea’s market has had a remarkable run. This week the total value of its listed companies passed $5 trillion for the first time.
That briefly made it the world’s sixth-largest stock market, just ahead of India. Today’s fall is a pause after that climb, not a reversal of it.
The Region — A Broad Pullback
Australia and China Slip
Australia’s main index fell the most in the region, down 1.88% to 8,686.10. It followed yesterday’s news that the economy grew a little less than expected.
In China, the main mainland index eased 0.69%, while Hong Kong’s market fell 1.31%. The mainland held up slightly better than tech-heavy Hong Kong.
India Holds Steady
India was the bright spot, with its main index slightly higher and another barely changed. It largely avoided the selling that hit the rest of the region.
That steadiness fits a pattern of strong demand at home. India has been less tied to the global technology swings than its neighbours.
What’s Behind It — Oil and Technology
Oil Keeps the Mood Cautious
Oil prices stayed high on Thursday, with Brent crude pushing toward $99 a barrel. High energy costs raise the worry of faster inflation across the region.
That is a particular problem for countries that import most of their energy. Japan, South Korea, and others all feel that pressure.
A Global Technology Wobble
The fall in technology shares started in the United States overnight, where chipmaker Nvidia dropped. That selling spread to Asia’s big chip and technology names.
Even some London-listed banks with large Asian businesses fell sharply. It was a broad, cautious day for investors everywhere.
The Bigger Picture — A Breather, Not a Break
Records Cut Both Ways
Just a day ago, Japan’s market was setting records and the mood was upbeat. Today’s fall is a reminder that markets rarely move in a straight line.
After a long climb, a step back is normal and often healthy. The question is whether it stays a pause or turns into something more.
What to Watch Next
The two big swing factors are oil and Japan’s central bank. If oil keeps rising or the yen keeps weakening, the pressure builds.
For now, the strong run in chips and technology is taking a rest. Whether it resumes depends a lot on what happens next in the Middle East.
The Read
Asian markets slipped on Thursday, a day after Japan’s record, with technology shares leading the fall and SoftBank dropping about 11%. The Nikkei fell 1.36% and South Korea’s Kospi dropped 1.84% as it reopened after a holiday.
The Japanese yen weakened past 160 to the dollar, adding to pressure from high oil prices near $99 a barrel, and the head of Japan’s central bank signalled rates could still rise this month. Australia fell the most in the region, while China and Hong Kong eased and India held steady.
The selling started with a fall in US technology shares overnight and spread across Asia’s big chipmakers. After a long climb, including South Korea’s market passing $5 trillion in value, this looks more like a pause than a turning point.
What to Watch
Today · Asian markets slip after Japan’s record; SoftBank down about 11%
Today · The Japanese yen weakens past 160 to the US dollar
Today · Oil stays high, with Brent near $99 a barrel
This month · A possible small interest-rate rise in Japan
Ongoing · Whether the technology pullback is a pause or more
Ongoing · Oil prices and tensions in the Middle East
Ongoing · The strong run in South Korea’s market after passing $5 trillion
Ongoing · India’s steadier path versus its neighbours
View original source — Rio Times ↗
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