Asian markets dip after US tech stocks decline

Asian stocks experienced a slight retreat from their recent peaks following a downturn in Wall Street markets. The decline was influenced by a subdued investor response to Nvidia's latest earnings report. Despite the pullback, Asian equities have outperformed global benchmarks throughout the year.

Asian markets opened lower on Thursday, marking a modest pullback from highs achieved earlier in the week. This movement came in the wake of a selloff on Wall Street, particularly in technology stocks. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index, a key benchmark for the region, reflected this sentiment with a dip that tempered gains built up over recent sessions.

At the center of the US market weakness was Nvidia's earnings report, which failed to meet investor expectations as robustly as anticipated. The response led to a broader decline in tech-heavy indices, spilling over into Asian trading. Investors expressed caution, though interest remains strong in firms tied to the artificial intelligence sector.

Even with the current retreat, Asian equities have shown resilience, surpassing global peers in performance year-to-date. This outperformance underscores the region's role in the AI supply chain, where companies are seen as vital contributors to technological advancements. Market watchers note that while short-term volatility persists, the focus on AI-related opportunities continues to drive underlying optimism.

No specific timelines for recovery were outlined, but the interplay between US tech results and Asian markets highlights interconnected global dynamics.

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Illustration of Middle East tensions causing stock market drops, oil price spikes, and investor flight to US dollar.
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Middle East conflict fuels global market volatility and oil price surge

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Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, involving the US, Israel, and Iran, have triggered a slide in Asian shares and a surge in oil prices. Investors are turning to the US dollar for safety amid fears of prolonged energy cost increases and inflation. While emerging markets face short-term losses, experts see long-term resilience.

Japan's Nikkei share average rose 0.76% to 57,256.55 on Tuesday as trading resumed after a holiday, lifted by gains in AI-related stocks on speculation of a Nvidia-OpenAI deal. Bank shares fell amid concerns over a U.S. firm's asset sales. The broader Topix index edged up 0.1%.

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Japan's Nikkei share average edged lower on Thursday as a stronger yen weighed on exporter-heavy stocks. Chip-testing equipment maker Advantest surged 7.6% after raising its annual profit forecast, limiting the losses. A less dovish Federal Reserve also dampened market sentiment.

Nvidia Corporation reported stronger-than-expected results for its fiscal fourth quarter of 2026, with revenue rising 73% year-over-year to $68.1 billion. The company's data center segment, fueled by products like Blackwell and NVLink, now accounts for over 90% of total revenue. Asian markets climbed for a fourth straight day, boosted by Nvidia's upbeat sales forecast.

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Indian IT stocks experienced a brief rebound on Wednesday, halting a five-day losing streak. Analysts, however, caution that this uptick may not last, with persistent bearish sentiments in derivatives. The sector has been under pressure in February amid growing concerns over AI's impact on revenues.

Despite a hot domestic market, South Korean investors have increased purchases on Hong Kong and mainland exchanges this year. Data shows they bought US$507 million in Hong Kong-listed shares and US$154 million in mainland-listed shares, focusing heavily on AI and semiconductor names.

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