Nikkei 225 crosses 62,000 as Asian markets rally on relief hopes

Nikkei 225 crosses 62,000 as Asian markets rally on relief hopes
Devesh Kumar
07 May 2026, 07:24 AM

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Nikkei 225 (Japan equities)

Buy Nikkei exposure via iShares MSCI Japan ETF (EWJ) or Nikkei 225 futures. The index just broke 62,000 on a broad Asia risk-on impulse tied to Strait of Hormuz de-escalation hopes, and Japan is the catch-up leader after the holiday. Yen volatility is a near-term tailwind for exporters if the yen stays contained while stocks run.

Key Risk: A renewed Middle East escalation that spikes oil and forces a risk-off move, crushing the “relief” bid.

Korea tech profit-taking

Sell iShares MSCI South Korea ETF (EWY) or short Kosdaq/tech beta. The article flags selective strength: Kospi and especially Kosdaq underperformed as traders locked in profits in growth/tech after a prior run. If the rally is driven by Japan catch-up and de-escalation, Korea’s tech leadership is the first to fade.

Key Risk: Korea re-accelerates on fresh earnings/AI momentum and the market broadens into a full risk-on surge, reversing profit-taking.

  • Nikkei 225 crossed 62,000 for the first time after Japan’s holiday reopening.
  • Asia-Pacific equities rallied on hopes of easing Middle East tensions.
  • Oil stayed above $100 a barrel, limiting broader risk appetite.

Asian markets opened Thursday with a powerful relief bid, as investors leaned into hopes that tensions in the Middle East may ease enough to keep the Strait of Hormuz open.

Japan set the tone, with the Nikkei 225 vaulting through 62,000 for the first time, while broader regional equities also pushed higher.

But the mood was not euphoric as oil still held above $100 a barrel, and traders kept one eye on the next headline out of the Gulf.

Japan leads the charge

Tokyo was the clear leader of the session as Nikkei returned from a long holiday and crossed 62,000 for the first time, catching up with a sharp AI-led earnings rally.

The benchmark index traded at 62,243.88, up 4.6%, underscoring the scale of the move.

The Topix also advanced strongly, while the yen stayed in focus after its recent bouts of volatility.

Asia-Pacific equities outside Japan also reached fresh record highs, highlighting the depth of the rally's spread throughout the region.

However, traders continued to monitor the yen closely, as currency volatility remains an important signal for global investors' positioning in Japanese assets.

For now, the Japanese market is being read as both a catch-up trade and a continuation of the broader risk-on story that has carried tech and earnings-linked names higher.

Relief trade, but not a blanket rally

The rest of Asia was firmer, but the gains were selective rather than indiscriminate.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 gained around 1.5%, while South Korea’s Kospi underperformed after a strong prior run.

The Kospi fell 0.68%, while the small-cap Kosdaq slipped 0.56% as traders locked in profits in technology and growth stocks.

The softer performance in Seoul highlighted that the regional rally is still selective and dependent on sector positioning, rather than a full-scale surge in risk appetite.

MSCI’s index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 1% to another all-time high.

That mix matters as investors seem willing to buy the de-escalation story, but they are not yet treating it as a clean, permanent resolution.

The market is still trading with a geopolitical discount attached.

Oil, yields and the next headline risk

Energy remains the market’s main tension point.

Brent crude was at $102.29 a barrel in early Asian trading and US crude at $96.28, around 40% above where it was at the start of the conflict.

That is enough to keep inflation concerns alive and to limit how far equities can run on optimism alone.

The Strait of Hormuz remained unresolved, and 10-year Treasury yields were still elevated versus pre-conflict levels, a reminder that the bond and oil markets are still signaling caution even as stocks celebrate the possibility of peace.