Invezz

Nikkei drops as Asian markets buckle under Fed hike shock and oil rebound

Nikkei drops as Asian markets buckle under Fed hike shock and oil rebound
Devesh Kumar
23 Jun 2026, 12:22 PM

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Short USD/JPY risk

Sell USD/JPY (or buy JPY via FX forwards/JPY futures). The article flags yen near levels that keep Tokyo on alert and highlights official concern after the dollar held near one-year highs. If Fed repricing cools risk appetite, the “higher-for-longer” USD bid should fade and Japan’s policy response risk rises.

Key Risk: The Fed stays clearly more hawkish than markets expect, keeping the dollar bid strong and pushing USD/JPY higher again.

Rotate out of AI megacaps

Sell Nasdaq-100 exposure (e.g., short QQQ or sell Nasdaq-100 futures). It notes megacap tech pressure and “AI-led trade” scrutiny after a powerful run, while Asia leadership broadens into steadier cash-flow names. A hawkish Fed path plus a stronger dollar typically hits long-duration growth hardest.

Key Risk: Tech earnings re-accelerate and investors reprice AI growth upward despite tighter financial conditions, lifting Nasdaq back to leadership.

  • Asian stocks slip as Fed hike bets overshadow Iran oil relief.
  • Brent steadies near $78 as traders weigh Iran waiver and Hormuz risk.
  • Yen holds near 161.55 as strong dollar keeps Tokyo on intervention alert.

Asian markets lost some of Monday’s relief as investors found a new set of risks to trade.

A temporary US sanctions waiver linked to Iran helped oil stabilise after a sharp fall, but it did not remove the bigger concern now driving cross-asset moves: a Federal Reserve that may be preparing to tighten again.

Equities slipped across much of Asia, the dollar held near one-year highs and the yen stayed close to levels that keep Tokyo on alert.

The message from markets was a clear step back from the idea that geopolitics alone had been the main threat to risk appetite.

Fed repricing unsettles Asian risk

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.5%, while S&P 500 futures edged lower after a weaker Wall Street session.

The Nasdaq had dropped 1.3% overnight as megacap technology names came under pressure, suggesting the AI-led trade is facing more scrutiny after a powerful run.

The rotation was visible across the region. Japan’s Nikkei fell 0.6%, even after a private survey showed factory activity remained strong in June.

South Korea’s Kospi swung between gains and losses before trading about 2% lower, while Taiwan’s market opened higher and touched a fresh record.

Strategists said leadership was becoming less narrow, with investors moving away from the former market leaders and looking for steadier cash-flow names.

Oil bounce keeps inflation in view

Brent crude rose 0.2% to about $78 a barrel, recovering some ground after settling more than 3% lower in the previous session.

Supply fears eased after Washington signalled progress in talks with Tehran and officials said the Strait of Hormuz remained open.

Still, the sanctions waiver complicates the picture. More Iranian supply could calm energy markets, but a rebound in crude shows traders are not ready to remove the Middle East risk premium entirely.

That matters for central banks because oil is again feeding into inflation expectations.

Japan’s manufacturing PMI rose to 54.9 in June, helped by the fastest growth in new orders in more than four years.

The strength was encouraging, but rising fuel and raw material costs also showed why investors are watching energy prices closely.

Dollar strength tests policymakers

The dollar index traded near 101.04, close to its highest level since May last year, as traders priced a much more hawkish Fed path.

CME FedWatch showed markets assigning a 54% chance of at least two quarter-point hikes by year-end, compared with about 15% a week earlier.

The yen was little changed near 161.55 per dollar, close to four-decade lows.

Japan’s finance minister held talks with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, underscoring official concern over sharp currency moves.

Sterling was steady near $1.3247 after Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he would resign, opening the way for an orderly leadership transition.

Gold slipped 0.2%, while bitcoin and ether also traded lower as the stronger dollar kept pressure on alternative assets.