Asia shares retreat from record as Apple price hikes rain on chip parade
South Korea’s Kospi tumbles 8.2%, triggering a circuit breaker that halts trading for 20 minutes
[SYDNEY] Asian shares pulled back on Friday (Jun 26) after a stellar quarter, as Apple’s hefty price hikes revealed the downside of booming chip demand, while the threat of Japanese intervention kept the yen from hitting 40-year lows.
Oil prices fell towards their lowest in fourth months, with Brent crude futures down 1.9 per cent to US$73.9 a barrel, as Saudi Aramco resumed oil loading at its Ras Tanura terminal after a halt of almost four months.
More stranded oil tankers have crossed the Strait of Hormuz with the help of military escorts, although a cargo ship was hit by a projectile. Nasdaq futures tumbled 1.7 per cent in Asia, as investor sentiment soured after a media report that OpenAI is considering holding off on its public debut until next year.
European bourses are bracing for a much lower open, with pan-region stock futures sliding 1 per cent.
Shares of Apple slid 6.1 per cent overnight after the tech giant announced price increases for iPads and MacBooks to counter the surging cost of memory and storage chips. That wiped about US$250 billion off its market value. Microsoft is raising prices for its Xbox gaming consoles by up to US$150 worldwide.
The price increases tempered investor enthusiasm about a blowout earnings report from chipmaker Micron this week, whose shares surged almost 16 per cent overnight to a record high.
“Apple’s price increases were a reflection of how the big tech may at some point start to feel the pain of these higher component costs, and that can become a broader ecosystem headwind,” said Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo. “That is why markets are becoming more cautious. Higher input costs, heavier capex needs and rising funding demands are making investors more selective about AI exposure.”
Analysts also say that month-end and quarter-end rebalancing flows might have contributed to the weakness and choppy prices in big tech companies, which have outperformed for much of the second quarter.
On Friday, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 3.8 per cent, bringing its weekly loss to 5.4 per cent, as investors took profits from a record run. While it was down 3.7 per cent for the month, the index was up a whopping 21 per cent for the quarter.
Japan’s Nikkei slumped 5 per cent and was headed for a weekly drop of 3.6 per cent. It has climbed 3.5 per cent for the month and surged 34 per cent for the quarter.
South Korea’s Kospi tumbled 8.2 per cent, triggering a circuit breaker that halted trading for 20 minutes. It was down 9.4 per cent for the week, but still managed a monstrous 62 per cent gain for the quarter. Chinese blue-chips fell 2.9 per cent and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index lost 2.4 per cent.
Yen weak
In the currency markets, the yen teetered near its weakest level against the US dollar in 40 years at 161.73, well beyond the 160 level that many see as a line in the sand for Japanese authorities. It found little relief even as a US inflation reading met forecasts and traders trimmed bets for a rate hike from the Federal Reserve in September.
Separate data also showed the US economy grew faster than previously estimated in the first quarter, thanks to a downward revision to imports, but consumer spending almost stalled, casting doubt on growth momentum in the second quarter.
The US dollar index, which measures the greenback’s strength against a basket of six major peers, held at 101.46, not far from its strongest level since May 2025. It has risen 2.6 per cent this month.
Treasury yields were steady on Friday after slipping a little overnight. Two-year yields held at 4.1250 per cent, having eased 2 basis points on Thursday, while ten-year yields were little changed at 4.4020 per cent, having hit a nearly two-month low of 4.3627 per cent in the previous session.
Precious metals have had a rough month, with spot gold down 12 per cent to US$3,992 an ounce and spot silver sliding 25 per cent to US$56.3 an ounce. REUTERS
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