Asian stocks rallied, with the Nikkei surging past 57,000 after Takaichi’s election victory.

Most Asian markets climbed sharply on Monday, tracking Wall Street’s tech-led rebound, while Japanese shares jumped to record highs after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s coalition won a decisive lower-house victory. Risk sentiment improved across the region following Friday’s strong U.S. rebound from AI-driven losses, with U.S. stock futures also edging higher in Asian trade.

Nikkei tops 57,000 following Takaichi’s election victory

Japan’s Nikkei 225 jumped as much as 5.6% to a new record of 57,337.07, supported by improved political certainty after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s coalition won a commanding majority in Sunday’s lower-house election. The broader TOPIX index also surged 3.4% to an all-time high of 3,825.67.

Analysts said the decisive victory gives Takaichi greater latitude to push through policy initiatives, with markets anticipating higher public spending, tax incentives, and measures to lift wages and corporate investment, alongside continued backing for key sectors such as technology, defense, and energy. While the outcome is seen as positive for Japanese equities, it is expected to pressure government bonds and the yen.

Asian tech stocks jump, with South Korea’s KOSPI surging nearly 5%

Asian tech stocks rallied at the start of the week, supported by gains in U.S. chipmakers and AI-linked shares. South Korea’s KOSPI surged nearly 5%, rebounding from sharp losses, as Samsung Electronics jumped more than 5% on reports it will begin mass production of HBM4 chips later this month, while SK Hynix also climbed over 5%.

Elsewhere, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 2% with the tech subindex up 1.5%, while China’s CSI 300 and Shanghai Composite gained 1.3% each. Australia’s ASX 200 advanced 2%, Singapore’s STI added 1%, and India’s Nifty 50 futures edged higher. Despite the rebound, investors remain cautious amid recent volatility in tech stocks and ahead of key U.S. jobs and inflation data due later this week.

Sources: Ayushman Ojha

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