TheJakartaPost

Please Update your browser

Your browser is out of date, and may not be compatible with our website. A list of the most popular web browsers can be found below.
Just click on the icons to get to the download page.

Jakarta Post

Asian stocks set for record-breaking quarter; dollar sinks gold and yen

Tom Westbrook (Reuters)
Singapore
Tue, June 30, 2026 Published on Jun. 30, 2026 Published on 2026-06-30T10:26:30+07:00

Change text size

Gift Premium Articles
to Anyone

Share the best of The Jakarta Post with friends, family, or colleagues. As a subscriber, you can gift 3 to 5 articles each month that anyone can read—no subscription needed!
A man walks out of the Tokyo Stock Exchange building in Tokyo on April 6, 2026. A man walks out of the Tokyo Stock Exchange building in Tokyo on April 6, 2026. (Reuters/Issei Kato)

A

sian stocks wobbled toward the end of a sparkling quarter on Tuesday, while a resurgent dollar pushed the yen to a four-decade low and was headed for a fourth straight quarterly rise.

Japan's Nikkei, which was steady in early trade, is set for a record rise of more than 36 percent for the quarter. South Korea's chipmaker-driven KOSPI slipped 1 percent, though it was set for an eye-popping second-quarter rise of nearly 65 percent having more than doubled year-to-date.

The oil market's worries about war have receded into memory with benchmark Brent crude futures at pre-war prices of $72.49 a barrel, even though the interim ceasefire is strained.

"Now that we have oil prices down, it's reinforcing our view of more trend-like growth around the world relative to sub-trend that we were thinking about a couple of months ago, and feeding into the better earnings story as well," said Kerry Craig, strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management in Melbourne.

Wall Street indexes rose overnight and futures were flat in the Asia morning. The dollar eyed a quarterly rise thanks to a remarkable re-pricing of the US interest rate outlook which has flipped from cuts to hikes on US economic strength and inflationary pressures.

The dollar's rise has driven gold to its largest quarterly fall in more than a decade while the yen touched a four-decade trough of 162.41 per dollar in Asia trade, setting traders on edge about possible Japanese intervention.

The Jakarta Post - Newsletter Icon

Prospects

Every Monday

With exclusive interviews and in-depth coverage of the region's most pressing business issues, "Prospects" is the go-to source for staying ahead of the curve in Indonesia's rapidly evolving business landscape.

By registering, you agree with The Jakarta Post's

Thank You

for signing up our newsletter!

Please check your email for your newsletter subscription.

View More Newsletter

Japan's Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama said authorities stood ready to respond appropriately at any time.

The dollar index is up 1.3 percent this quarter, though this week the euro regained the $1.14 chart level and the next moves are likely to be driven by US jobs data, due on Thursday owing to Friday being a holiday, and a Wednesday appearance by Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh.

Chinese manufacturing expanded in June thanks to high-tech exports, figures on Tuesday showed, while European inflation and US consumer confidence and job openings highlight the data schedule ahead in the session.

Selling the record rally

Around Asia, Taiwan's benchmark is set for a more than 40 percent rise this quarter while other regions cannot quite keep pace with the semiconductor-led markets.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng has been a noticeable laggard as it limped — mostly flat on Tuesday — to a 7.5 percent quarterly drop.

The behavior of big investors through the record quarter has been unusual, with the surging index weighting of Asia's big chipmakers driving foreigners to sell all the way up as they rebalance portfolios and worry about diversification.

A net $17.3 billion has left South Korean equities in the year so far, according to BNY.

"That gap between returns and flows fits a broader pattern across Asia’s tech-heavy markets: strong performance is triggering rebalancing and profit-taking, not fresh institutional buying," said BNY macro strategist Geoff Yu.

Solid gains for Europe's STOXX index, set to notch a 9 percent rise for the quarter, and China's mainland blue-chip CSI300, up about 10 percent this quarter, are catching investors' attention.

"Some of the concerns that investors have around how much tech exposure they have [...] (has them) looking for other themes — whether that's defence, renewables, and how they think about building more robust diversification in their portfolio," said J.P. Morgan Asset Management's Craig

Your Opinion Matters

Share your experiences, suggestions, and any issues you've encountered on The Jakarta Post. We're here to listen.

Enter at least 30 characters
0 / 30

Thank You

Thank you for sharing your thoughts. We appreciate your feedback.

Share options

Quickly share this news with your network—keep everyone informed with just a single click!

Change text size options

Customize your reading experience by adjusting the text size to small, medium, or large—find what’s most comfortable for you.

Gift Premium Articles
to Anyone

Share the best of The Jakarta Post with friends, family, or colleagues. As a subscriber, you can gift 3 to 5 articles each month that anyone can read—no subscription needed!

Continue in the app

Get the best experience—faster access, exclusive features, and a seamless way to stay updated.