Chip Stocks Extend Rout Into Asia as Nikkei Slides and Kospi Sits Out on Holiday, Wheat Hammers Out a Two-Year High on Black Sea Strikes, and the ASX 200 Slips on Banks and Miners | Asian Session – Technical Analysis | 17 July 2026
Chip Stocks Extend Their Rout Into the Asian Session as the Nikkei Opens Lower and the Kospi Sits Out on a Market Holiday, Wheat Presses to a Two-Year High on Black Sea Strikes, the ASX 200 Slips on Banks and Miners
Chip stocks extend Thursday’s Wall Street rout into Asia as the Nikkei opens lower and the Kospi sits out a market holiday, Wheat presses to a two-year high on Black Sea strikes, Yen intervention risk builds into Monday’s long weekend, the ASX 200 slips on banks and miners, and Chainlink outpaces a mixed crypto tape.
Friday’s Asian session is defined by a direct continuation of Thursday’s semiconductor-led selloff on Wall Street, per live Reuters, Bloomberg, Investing.com and FXStreet coverage. The Nasdaq 100 fell roughly 1.6% Thursday as investors grew more skeptical that the scale of ongoing AI infrastructure spending can be justified by current valuations, and the mood soured further after the closing bell when Netflix shares dropped more than 8% in extended trading on management’s guidance for a second straight quarter of decelerating sales growth. Japan’s Nikkei 225 bore the brunt of the overnight spillover, tumbling approximately 2.8% on Thursday in its steepest one-day decline in weeks, led lower by chip-adjacent names: Kioxia Holdings slid 8.7%, SoftBank Group fell 5.9%, Tokyo Electron dropped 5.2%, Advantest lost 5.1% and Fujikura declined 5%. Bloomberg reports that equity-index futures are pointing to further declines for benchmarks in both Japan and Hong Kong as Friday’s session gets underway. South Korea’s Kospi, which had been the most violent swing factor in the region — plunging as much as 7.6% intraday on Thursday before paring the bulk of that loss — is closed for a market holiday on Friday, removing the most AI-sensitive gauge in Asia from the day’s price action entirely.
Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 is already underway and trading 0.85% lower at 8,765.00 in early Sydney dealing, with weakness concentrated in the index’s largest constituents: heavyweight banks and miners are offsetting gains from almost everywhere else on the benchmark, and BHP alone is down roughly 5% across the past two trading sessions. Consumer staples and select industrials are among the few pockets of relative strength. In currencies, the Dollar carries a broadly firm tone into the Asian session. USD/JPY is consolidating just above the 162.00 handle, sticking closely to its 20-period EMA near 162.41 in what technicians describe as an Ascending Triangle formation reflecting a sharp contraction in volatility. The more consequential story, however, is positioning: Japanese retail accounts have built their largest net Dollar-short position since Financial Futures Association of Japan records began in 2008, quadrupling in June alone to roughly ¥2.79 trillion, or about $17.2 billion. With Monday marking the Marine Day holiday and a thin-liquidity window for any Ministry of Finance intervention executed through the Bank of Japan, Friday’s session is being treated as the final full-liquidity positioning window before a potential short squeeze if authorities stay on the sidelines.
NZD/USD has eased to around 0.5834, down modestly on the session, as the Dollar firms broadly on continued signs of US economic resilience even as the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s hawkish rhetoric — markets are pricing further tightening after July’s first hike in three years — keeps a floor under the Kiwi on dips. Commodities are telling a genuinely two-sided story this morning. Wheat has surged to its highest level since May 2024, changing hands near $6.68 a bushel, as fresh Russian and Ukrainian missile and drone strikes on vessels in the Black Sea threaten to further choke off a corridor that handles a substantial share of global grain exports, reviving memories of the 2022 supply shock. Copper, by contrast, has eased back to around $6.24 a pound from three-week highs, as the broader AI-valuation risk-off mood weighs on sentiment around industrial demand, even though tightening Chilean output — hit by water shortages, lower ore grades and labour disputes — continues to underpin the metal structurally.
The US-Iran standoff over the Strait of Hormuz grinds into a seventh consecutive day. CENTCOM disabled a Curacao-flagged tanker attempting to run the reinstated naval blockade toward Iran’s Kharg Island terminal on Wednesday, and both sides continue to trade strikes across the Gulf region. Brent crude is holding near $84.60 and Gold is hovering just above the psychologically important $4,000 level, with the metal’s safe-haven bid capped by elevated Fed rate-hike odds — markets currently price roughly a 51% probability of a hike by September. Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson, a centrist voice navigating the Fed under new Chair Kevin Warsh, is due to speak later in the session and is expected to reiterate a data-dependent, cautiously optimistic tone. Japan’s National CPI print for June is also on the docket and will be watched closely for its implications for the Bank of Japan’s rate path. In digital assets, Bitcoin is holding a firmer tone near the $64,000–$65,000 zone after this week’s cooler-than-expected US inflation data, with Ethereum outperforming on the week. BNB is broadly flat near $568.31 in a cautious, fear-dominated altcoin tape, while Chainlink stands out as the session’s clearest crypto winner, up nearly 9% on the week on rising CCIP cross-chain transfer volumes, fresh wallet growth, and news of a planned Q4 2026 DTCC collateral-network deployment.
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Asian Session Headlines
The stories driving price action across currencies, equities, commodities and crypto this session
Asian Session Economic Calendar — 17 July 2026
Key releases and events shaping price action across today’s Asian session (local time zones noted; ET in parentheses where relevant)
| Time (Local) | Event | Forecast / Detail | Impact | Market Read |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇯🇵08:30 JST | Japan National CPI (June, y/y) | Consensus seen firming modestly from May’s 1.5% print; core watched closely against the BoJ’s 2% target | 🔴 HIGH | Key input for BoJ rate-path speculation and near-term USD/JPY intervention calculus |
| 🇰🇷All Day | South Korea Kospi & Kosdaq Market Holiday | Exchange closed; no cash-equity trading in Seoul | 🟢 MEDIUM | Removes the region’s most volatile AI-proxy index from Friday’s session entirely |
| 🇦🇺Overnight | ASX 200 Cash Session (Sydney) | Trading already underway, down 0.85% to 8,765.00 in early dealing | 🟢 HIGH | Banks and miners weighing on the index; BHP down ~5% over two sessions |
| 🇲🇾Morning | Malaysia Trade Balance (June) | Export and import growth watched for regional trade-flow signals | ⚪ LOW | Secondary regional data point; limited direct FX impact expected |
| 🇺🇸~13:00 ET | Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson Speaks | Centrist policymaker expected to reiterate data-dependent, cautiously optimistic tone under new Chair Kevin Warsh | 🔴 CRITICAL | Key swing factor for broad Dollar tone into the New York handover |
| 🇺🇸Ongoing | Strait of Hormuz / Kharg Island Standoff (Day 7) | CENTCOM disabled a tanker bound for Kharg Island Wednesday; blockade remains in force | 🔴 CRITICAL | Primary driver of Brent, Gold’s geopolitical floor and broad risk sentiment |
| 🇺🇦🇩🇪Ongoing | Black Sea Grain Shipping Strikes (Russia-Ukraine) | Fresh missile and drone strikes on vessels raise fresh export-disruption concerns | 🔴 CRITICAL | Primary driver behind Wheat’s push to its highest level since May 2024 |
| 🇺🇵Sunday | PBOC Loan Prime Rate Decision (preview) | Widely expected to be left unchanged | ⚪ LOW | Ahead item; limited near-term impact but watched for the week-ahead setup |
Asian Session Trade Ideas
Technical setups and fundamental context across the session’s seven key instruments
USD/JPY
Fundamental Backdrop
USD/JPY is consolidating just above 162.00, close to a four-decade high, as the wide US-Japan rate gap continues to favour Dollar carry demand even after the Bank of Japan’s rate hike to 1%. The more consequential dynamic heading into the weekend is positioning: Japanese retail traders have quadrupled their net Dollar-short position in June to roughly ¥2.79 trillion, the largest since 2008 records began, leaving the pair vulnerable to a disorderly short squeeze if the Ministry of Finance opts against intervening before Monday’s thin-liquidity Marine Day holiday. Verbal intervention warnings from Japan’s Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama have so far only dented the pair modestly.
Technical Outlook
The pair is forming an Ascending Triangle with a sharp contraction in volatility, trading near its 20-period EMA at 162.41. A break above resistance at 163.10 would open the way toward this trade’s 163.90 target and, on further crowded-short unwind, the 164–165 zone. On the downside, initial support sits at the trend-line break near 162.10, with a deeper slide exposing the July 3 low near 160.80, this trade’s stop level.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) Japan’s National CPI print for June at 08:30 JST; (2) any verbal or actual intervention signal from Japan’s Ministry of Finance ahead of Monday’s holiday; (3) Fed Vice Chair Jefferson’s remarks later in the session; (4) broader Dollar Index direction; (5) US Treasury yield moves, particularly at the long end.
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NZD/USD
Fundamental Backdrop
NZD/USD has eased to around 0.5834 as the US Dollar rebounds broadly from a near one-month low, helped by continued signs of US economic resilience in this week’s data. Working against the Dollar’s advance is the Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s hawkish tilt: markets are pricing further tightening after the central bank’s first rate hike in three years earlier this month, with Chief Economist Paul Conway flagging that inflation may not slow as quickly as forecast. That RBNZ backdrop should continue to cushion deeper Kiwi losses even as the broader risk-off mood tied to the chip-stock selloff weighs on this classically risk-sensitive currency.
Technical Outlook
The pair remains capped below the confluence of its 50- and 100-day Simple Moving Averages near 0.5834–0.5892, having pulled back from Wednesday’s nearly one-month high around 0.5845. A clean break back above that zone would expose the March 19 high at 0.5892 and, on further strength, 0.5900. On the downside, this trade’s 0.5780 target sits just above the 21-day EMA, with a deeper slide opening a retest of the 0.5700 psychological level.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) broader Dollar Index direction into Fed Vice Chair Jefferson’s remarks; (2) risk sentiment tied to the ongoing Asian chip-stock selloff; (3) any fresh RBNZ commentary on the rate path; (4) Copper and broader commodity-currency correlation; (5) Australia’s ASX 200 direction as a regional risk-sentiment proxy.
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Copper
Fundamental Backdrop
Copper has eased back to around $6.24 a pound after climbing above $6.24 to three-week highs earlier this week, as the broader AI-valuation risk-off mood tied to the ongoing chip-stock selloff weighs on sentiment around industrial and technology-linked demand. Working against that softness is a genuine structural supply story: Chilean output has been hit by water shortages, declining ore grades, unplanned maintenance and labour disputes, with the country’s monthly economic activity index recording consecutive declines this year largely on weaker mining activity. Chile accounts for roughly half of global copper exports, and softer-than-expected US inflation data this week has also modestly improved the outlook for Fed rate cuts, a supportive backdrop for industrial metals more broadly.
Technical Outlook
The metal is pulling back from Thursday’s close near $6.28, its highest level in three weeks, with the $6.14 area now the first line of technical support. A confirmed break below opens a run toward this trade’s $6.12 buy-dip zone and, on a deeper slide, the $5.99 stop-loss area. On the upside, resistance is layered near $6.32–$6.34, with a break above clearing the way toward this trade’s $6.39 target.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) broader risk sentiment tied to the Asian chip-stock selloff and its read-through to industrial demand; (2) further Chilean supply headlines from Codelco and other major producers; (3) China’s demand signals via the PBOC’s Sunday rate decision preview; (4) US Dollar Index direction; (5) any fresh Fed rate-path commentary from Vice Chair Jefferson.
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Wheat
Fundamental Backdrop
Wheat has surged to its highest level since May 2024, trading near $6.68 a bushel, as fresh Russian and Ukrainian missile and drone strikes on vessels in the Black Sea raise renewed concerns over disruptions to a corridor that handles a substantial share of global grain exports. Ukrainian forces have targeted Russian vessels in the Black Sea after striking more than 100 Russia-linked ships in the Sea of Azov, while Moscow has stepped up attacks on Ukrainian ports; Ukraine has already lost roughly a third of its Black Sea grain export capacity to intensified Russian strikes. Russia remains the world’s largest wheat exporter and Ukraine among the leading suppliers, and the latest escalation is reviving memories of the 2022 supply shock that followed the initial closure of Ukrainian ports.
Technical Outlook
The front-month contract is testing levels last seen in May 2024, with the market beginning to price in a meaningful share of the Black Sea export disruption. A pullback toward this trade’s $6.54 buy-dip zone would offer a favourable entry within the broader uptrend, with the $6.39 stop-loss area representing the next meaningful support shelf. On the upside, a clean break above the recent highs opens the way toward this trade’s $6.89 target, a level not tested since the 2022-2023 supply-shock period.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) any further escalation or de-escalation in Black Sea shipping attacks; (2) Friday’s delayed USDA Export Sales data, with traders looking for 250,000–600,000 MT of wheat sales; (3) SovEcon and other private forecasters’ updates to Russia’s 2026 crop estimate; (4) broader grain-complex spillover from corn and soybeans; (5) US Dollar direction, given wheat’s dollar-denominated export pricing.
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ASX 200
Fundamental Backdrop
The S&P/ASX 200 is trading 0.85% lower at 8,765.00 in early Friday dealing, with weakness concentrated in the index’s heaviest constituents: banks and miners are offsetting gains from almost everywhere else on the benchmark. BHP has fallen roughly 5% across the past two sessions, dragging the broader mining complex lower alongside Rio Tinto and Northern Star, even as consumer staples names such as Coles and Metcash post modest gains. The index is taking its cue directly from Thursday’s Wall Street chip-stock rout and the overnight weakness in Japan’s Nikkei 225, with local sentiment further pressured by ongoing Strait of Hormuz-linked oil-price volatility feeding into energy and shipping costs across the region.
Technical Outlook
The index remains below its 52-week high, having retreated from levels above 8,860 earlier in the week. A break below the psychological 8,732 support level would open a path toward this trade’s 8,672 target, while a bounce capped near the 8,812 resistance zone — this trade’s sell-rally entry — would keep the broader corrective structure intact. A close back above 8,847, this trade’s stop level, would suggest the pullback has run its course.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) continued direction in BHP, Rio Tinto and the broader mining complex; (2) spillover from Japan’s Nikkei 225 and the absence of Kospi price discovery on its holiday; (3) iron ore and Copper price direction as read-throughs for the resources sector; (4) any fresh Reserve Bank of Australia commentary; (5) US futures direction heading into the Wall Street reopen.
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BNB
Fundamental Backdrop
BNB is trading little changed near $568.31, broadly tracking a cautious, fear-dominated backdrop across mid-cap crypto assets even as Bitcoin holds a firmer tone near $64,000–$65,000 following this week’s cooler-than-expected US inflation data. Technical sentiment gauges continue to flag an “Extreme Fear” reading for BNB specifically, a contrarian signal some traders watch for potential mean-reversion setups. On the fundamental side, continued development activity on the BNB Chain ecosystem — including the recently launched BNBAgent SDK for AI-agent identity, commerce and payments — provides a structural narrative even as near-term price action stays rangebound.
Technical Outlook
BNB remains capped below the $600 psychological level after failing to hold gains above that zone in recent sessions, with the $555 area representing a well-tested support shelf from the past month of trading. A break below would expose the $540 stop-loss zone and, on further weakness, the low-$500s. On the upside, a reclaim of $600 would open the way toward this trade’s $595 target and, on continued strength, the $625–$630 resistance band.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) Bitcoin’s broader direction as the dominant crypto-market beta driver; (2) any fresh Binance ecosystem or regulatory headlines; (3) overall risk sentiment tied to the Asian equity chip-stock selloff; (4) US Dollar Index direction ahead of Fed Vice Chair Jefferson’s remarks; (5) continued spot Bitcoin ETF flow data as a read on institutional risk appetite.
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Chainlink (LINK)
Fundamental Backdrop
Chainlink is the clear standout performer across the crypto complex this week, up nearly 9% and outpacing both Bitcoin and the broader altcoin market. The move is being driven by a combination of on-chain and structural catalysts: CCIP cross-chain transfer volumes have reportedly surpassed rival Wormhole’s, the network added several thousand new wallets over a five-day stretch in its strongest growth burst of 2026, and the market continues to digest news of a planned Q4 2026 DTCC collateral-network appchain deployment — a tie-up with traditional capital-markets infrastructure that speaks directly to Chainlink’s core oracle and tokenization thesis. A recently completed token buyback has added further support.
Technical Outlook
LINK has reclaimed its 180-day support level and is pressing back toward its 200-day EMA resistance zone after a sharp multi-week rebound from oversold conditions. A daily close above the $8.35–$8.40 area would strengthen the bullish case and open a path toward this trade’s $8.90 target. On the downside, a pullback toward this trade’s $7.80 buy-dip zone would offer a favourable entry within the broader recovery structure, with the $7.45 stop-loss level sitting just below the recent swing low.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) continued CCIP adoption and volume data; (2) further detail on the DTCC collateral-network deployment timeline; (3) Bitcoin and broader crypto-market beta; (4) any fresh institutional tokenization or RWA (real-world asset) partnership announcements; (5) overall risk sentiment tied to the Asian equity chip-stock selloff.
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Asian Session FAQ
Answers to the questions traders are asking about today’s session
Asian Session Summary — Friday, 17 July 2026 (Live Update)
Friday’s Asian session is a direct continuation of Thursday’s Wall Street chip-stock rout, layered on top of an escalating Black Sea grain crisis and a Strait of Hormuz standoff now in its seventh day, per live Reuters, Bloomberg, Investing.com and FXStreet coverage. The Nasdaq 100 fell roughly 1.6% Thursday on renewed AI-valuation skepticism, and the mood worsened further after the close when Netflix sank more than 8% in extended trade on guidance for a second consecutive quarter of slowing growth. Japan’s Nikkei 225, heavily exposed to chip-equipment and memory names, tumbled around 2.8% Thursday — led by Kioxia (-8.7%), SoftBank Group (-5.9%), Tokyo Electron (-5.2%) and Advantest (-5.1%) — and futures point to further softness at Friday’s open, while South Korea’s Kospi, the region’s most volatile AI-proxy index after whipsawing as much as 7.6% intraday on Thursday, is closed Friday for a market holiday. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 is already trading 0.85% lower at 8,765.00, with heavyweight banks and miners — BHP is down roughly 5% over two sessions — offsetting gains almost everywhere else on the index. Layered on top of the equity story is a genuinely two-sided commodities picture: Wheat has surged to its highest level since May 2024 near $6.68 a bushel as fresh Russian and Ukrainian strikes threaten Black Sea grain shipping, while Copper has eased to around $6.24 a pound from three-week highs as the AI-valuation risk-off mood weighs on industrial demand sentiment, even as tightening Chilean supply keeps a structural floor under the metal. In currencies, USD/JPY is consolidating just above 162.00 with a genuinely two-sided risk profile: Japanese retail traders’ record net Dollar-short position raises the risk of a short squeeze if Tokyo authorities decline to intervene before Monday’s thin-liquidity Marine Day holiday, while NZD/USD has eased to around 0.5834 as the Dollar firms broadly on continued US economic resilience. The Strait of Hormuz standoff remains a dominant cross-asset driver, with CENTCOM disabling a tanker bound for Kharg Island on Wednesday, keeping Brent near $84.60 and Gold just above the $4,000 level. In digital assets, Bitcoin holds a firmer tone near $64,000–$65,000 after this week’s cooler US inflation data, BNB trades little changed near $568.31 in a cautious, fear-dominated tape, and Chainlink stands out as the session’s clear winner, up nearly 9% on the week on rising CCIP volumes and a planned Q4 2026 DTCC deployment. Highest-conviction session idea: buy Wheat dips toward $6.54, targeting $6.89 — the Black Sea escalation is a genuine, fast-moving supply-disruption catalyst layered on top of an already-tightening export corridor, though any Russia-Ukraine de-escalation or confirmation that shipping flows remain largely intact would undercut the setup quickly.
For the individual instruments: USD/JPY buy dips toward 161.60, stop 160.80, target 163.90 — record Japanese retail Dollar-short positioning and wide US-Japan rate differentials are genuine tailwinds for the upside case, though confirmed Ministry of Finance intervention before Monday’s holiday is a real risk to the setup. NZD/USD sell rallies toward 0.5865, stop 0.5900, target 0.5780 — broad Dollar firmness on US economic resilience is a genuine tailwind for the downside case, though the RBNZ’s hawkish tilt is a real risk that could cushion Kiwi losses. Copper buy dips toward $6.12, stop $5.99, target $6.39 — tightening Chilean supply is a genuine structural tailwind, though continued AI-valuation risk-off flows are a real near-term headwind. Wheat buy dips toward $6.54, stop $6.39, target $6.89 — the Black Sea escalation is a genuine and immediate tailwind, though any confirmation that shipping disruption is overstated is a real risk to the bullish setup. ASX 200 sell rallies toward 8,812, stop 8,847, target 8,672 — continued bank and miner weakness alongside regional chip-sector spillover are genuine tailwinds for the downside case, though a stabilization in Wall Street futures is a real risk. BNB buy dips toward $555, stop $540, target $595 — a firmer broader Bitcoin tone is a genuine supportive backdrop, though the lack of an idiosyncratic BNB catalyst this week is a real headwind relative to peers like Chainlink. Chainlink buy dips toward $7.80, stop $7.45, target $8.90 — rising CCIP adoption and the DTCC deployment news are genuine tailwinds, though a reversal in the broader crypto-market beta remains a real risk to the setup. The decisive variables for the remainder of the session are Japan’s National CPI print, Fed Vice Chair Jefferson’s remarks, any confirmation or denial of Bank of Japan intervention, continued Black Sea and Strait of Hormuz headline flow, and the direction of US equity futures heading into the Wall Street reopen. Size positions accordingly, and note that the geopolitical and macro backdrop remains exceptionally fluid and carries genuine event risk that could reshape sentiment sharply intraday.
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