Rio Times · asia Intelligence
Key Facts
—Japan The team flew home after a 1-2 comeback loss to Brazil, met by about 500 cheering fans.
—South Korea A group-stage exit dropped the side to 32nd in the world, its lowest in four and a half years.
—India market The Sensex jumped 579 points to 77,502, helped by falling oil and India-Japan summit hopes.
—China factories The official manufacturing gauge rose to 50.3, staying in growth for a fourth straight month.
—Indonesia fuel Pertamina cut prices for several non-subsidised fuels to ease household costs.
—Vietnam pensions About 3.5 million pensioners saw payments rise by 8 percent from July 1.
Football sorrow and quiet economic relief pull Asia in two directions this week. Japan came home to grateful cheers, South Korea to angry silence, while cheaper fuel and stronger factories softened the wider mood.
Beneath the sport, India’s market climbed and China’s plants got busier again. Yet bombings in southern Thailand and abuse scandals in Indonesia kept an anxious undertow running through the day.
Japan – A Grateful Homecoming
Fans line the airport
Japan’s players flew home on July 2 after losing 1-2 to Brazil in the last 32 of the World Cup, arriving on three separate flights into Tokyo’s two main airports.
Around 500 supporters and 100 reporters met the first arrivals at Narita, chanting and calling out ‘Japan, thank you’ as the squad walked through.
A coach in limbo
At an evening press conference in Tokyo, coach Hajime Moriyasu said the team’s ‘phase in the world has changed’ and vowed ‘the future is definitely world number one’.
The football association is expected to make an unusual one-year contract offer ahead of the Asian Cup in Saudi Arabia in January, leaving his future briefly uncertain.
South Korea – Anger and Shame
A historic collapse
South Korea crashed out at the group stage after losing to Mexico and South Africa, sliding to 32nd in the world ranking, its lowest in four and a half years.
Commentators called the defeat to South Africa the worst national-team game of the century, and the squad’s planned homecoming event was cancelled.
The coach walks away
Coach Hong Myung-bo announced his resignation at a press conference in Mexico, closing a painful chapter for the team.
The 26-player squad still receives bonuses totalling about 2.08 billion won, a sum that has drawn fresh irritation from disappointed fans.
“The future is definitely world number one,” Japan’s coach vowed, even in the sting of defeat.
India – Markets Ride the Optimism
A confident day of trading
The Sensex index of leading shares jumped 579 points to 77,502 on July 2, while the technology sector had its best day in about 14 months.
Gains came as oil prices eased on hopeful signs from United States-Iran talks and gentler comments from the American central bank.
Eyes on Japan ties
Investors pointed to hopes around the India-Japan summit, watching for deals on trade, defence, computer chips and artificial intelligence.
The rupee, India’s currency, softened a little to around 95.36 to the United States dollar, but that did not dent the day’s cheer.
Vietnam – A Half-Century Milestone
Fifty years of a name
Leader To Lam spoke on July 2 at the Reunification Hall marking 50 years since Saigon was renamed Ho Chi Minh City in 1976.
He urged planners to keep a ‘hundred-year, far-sighted vision’ so that today’s choices do not block tomorrow’s growth.
New laws touch daily life
From July 1, about 3.5 million pensioners saw their payments rise by 8 percent, with extra help for the lowest earners.
A special tax on petrol returned the same day, while a broader fuel-tax cut stays in place until the end of September.
China – Factories Find Their Feet
Back in growth
China’s official factory gauge rose to 50.3 in June, staying above the line that separates growth from decline for a fourth month in a row.
New orders climbed and export orders returned to growth, easing some of the anxiety around the wider economy.
Uneven strength
High-technology manufacturing was especially strong, with analysts crediting industries tied to artificial intelligence.
Yet small firms remained weak, and analysts warned of downward pressure in the second half of the year.
Indonesia – Relief and Outrage
Cheaper fuel at the pump
State firm Pertamina cut prices for several non-subsidised fuels from early July, easing pressure on drivers’ wallets.
The cheaper prices for subsidised fuels used by most households were left unchanged, and the company linked the move to world oil prices and public spending power.
Scandals stir anger
Police in Depok named a father and son as suspects in the sexual abuse of students at a religious boarding school in Bogor.
Separately, anti-graft officers detained the second wife of a regent tied to a bribery case, keeping public anger simmering.
Thailand – Unease in the South
Bombings return
The government is stepping up its response after a series of bomb attacks reignited violence in Thailand’s southernmost provinces.
Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul is set to meet Malaysian leaders on July 9-10 to seek solutions to the long-running unrest.
A hand to migrants
The cabinet approved a one-year extension of a scheme covering the legal status of long-term migrants, now running to June 30, 2027.
The move offers some steadiness at a moment when the mood in the deep south feels tense and unsettled.
Philippines – Tense Civic Energy
A permit pulled
Quezon City revoked the rally permit granted to the religious group Iglesia ni Cristo for Thursday, July 2.
Police urged protesters to comply with the conditions of any permit, sharpening the political atmosphere in the city.
A regional role
The Philippines continues as this year’s chair of the Southeast Asian bloc, coordinating the observer team on the Thailand-Cambodia border.
That mandate runs to July 2026, keeping Manila busy managing tensions well beyond its own streets.
The Bigger Picture
Asia woke on July 2 split between the pitch and the wallet. The World Cup dominated hearts, with Japan returning home to grateful cheers and South Korea to angry silence after a historic collapse.
Away from the football, there was quiet relief. India’s market climbed on falling oil, China’s factories grew for a fourth straight month, and cheaper fuel in Indonesia and Vietnam gently eased the cost of daily life.
Yet the calm was not complete. Bombings in southern Thailand, abuse scandals in Indonesia, protest tension in the Philippines and an approaching storm over northern Vietnam all kept a thread of worry running beneath the day.
What We Are Watching
Today – Moriyasu’s press conference signals whether he stays on for January’s Asian Cup.
Today – Quezon City protest tensions after the revoked rally permit.
This week – Australia meets Egypt on July 3, the last Asian side left in the knockout rounds.
This week – A tropical depression may become the season’s first storm, threatening heavy rain in northern Vietnam.
This week – Anutin’s July 9-10 talks with Malaysian leaders over southern-Thailand violence.
This week – Vietnam’s petrol tax changes take hold, affecting household and business costs.
Ahead – India’s university admission registration opens for millions of students.
Ahead – The World Cup final on July 19 at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happened when Japan's World Cup team arrived home after losing to Brazil?
About 500 fans and 100 reporters met the players at Narita airport, chanting 'Japan, thank you' as the squad walked through. The team had lost 1-2 to Brazil in the last 32 of the World Cup and arrived on three separate flights into Tokyo's two main airports.
Why did South Korea's coach resign, and do the players still get paid a bonus?
Coach Hong Myung-bo resigned after South Korea was knocked out in the group stage, losing to Mexico and South Africa, which pushed the team to its lowest world ranking in four and a half years. Despite the early exit, the 26-player squad still receives bonuses totalling about 2.08 billion won, which has angered disappointed fans.
What is happening with China's factories, and is the growth holding up evenly?
China's official factory gauge rose to 50.3 in June, marking a fourth straight month of growth, with new orders and export orders both climbing. However, small firms remained weak and analysts warned of downward pressure in the second half of the year, so the recovery is uneven.
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