Global Market Today: Asian stocks climb on tech rally, Yen hits 40-year low
Asian stocks surged to their best quarterly gain in 17 years, mirroring Wall Street's tech-led rally. The Japanese yen hit a four-decade low against the dollar, sparking concerns about market intervention. Global equities are poised for a strong q...

The Bank of Japan lifted its benchmark interest rate on June 16 to 1%, the highest since 1995. Yet the impact was minimal, as traders expect the Fed to stay hawkish going forward.
Stocks in Japan and South Korea rose, lifting the MSCI Asia Pacific Index by 0.5%. The regional gauge had gained 20% heading into the final trading day of the quarter. Asian markets took their cue from Wall Street, where a rally in chipmakers drove the S&P 500 up 1.2% and the Nasdaq 100 nearly twice as much on Monday.
Meanwhile, the yen traded around 161.93 a dollar early Tuesday after depreciating to 161.98 versus the greenback in New York trading. The currency’s slide to the weakest level since 1986 will generate unease in Japan and put traders on high alert for authorities wading into the market.
Monday’s rebound in stocks after the recent AI-driven selloff put global equities on track for their best quarter in almost six years. Investors now turn their focus to the US-Iran talks Tuesday and US June jobs data on Thursday that may offer clues on whether the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates higher for longer.
In the US, the stock resurgence has defied skeptics, coming in the face of war, an oil supply shock and inflation jitters. Since bottoming three months ago, the S&P 500 has staged one of the swiftest rebounds this century, gaining 20% from its March 30 low to its June 2 peak — something it has done just three other times since 2000.
“The bounce we’re seeing is a welcome development for the bulls,” said Matt Maley at Miller Tabak. “We continue to believe strongly that the action in the tech sector will continue to be the main driver in the stock market.”
While tech doesn’t have to keep outperforming in a big way, the sector needs to refrain from declining in a significant manner due to its heavy weight in the S&P 500, he noted. Otherwise, individual investors could start “rotating” toward cash, especially after hearing so much talk about bubbles in the past year, Maley added.
Elsewhere, American crude held its advance before expected US-Iran talks in Doha. The commodity traded around $70.15 a barrel. Gold was little changed around $4,015 an ounce. The dollar slipped, and US Treasury yields were little changed during the New York session.
Attention in Asia will be on the yen. While the weaker Japanese currency has boosted exporters’ profits and helped propel the country’s stocks to record highs, it has also raised import costs, squeezed households and added to political pressure on Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s government.
The Bank of Japan lifted its benchmark interest rate on June 16 to 1%, the highest since 1995. Yet the impact was minimal, as traders expect the Fed to stay hawkish going forward.
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