Asia stocks dip after Wall Street tech selloff, but still eye solid weekly gains.

Asian equities retreated on Friday, following a decline in U.S. technology stocks overnight as fresh concerns about stretched artificial intelligence valuations weighed on investor sentiment. Despite the pullback, regional markets remained on track for solid weekly gains after a strong rally earlier in the week fueled by AI enthusiasm and upbeat corporate earnings.

On Nasdaq Composite, shares fell as investors reassessed elevated AI-related valuations, pressuring semiconductor and growth stocks across Asia. Meanwhile, U.S. stock index futures were mostly flat by late evening trading (22:04 ET / 03:04 GMT).

KOSPI climbed to a new all-time high and is on track to post a weekly gain of about 9%.

In South Korea, the KOSPI rose 0.5% to a fresh record of 5,558.82, bucking the broader regional weakness and heading for an impressive weekly gain of nearly 9%, driven by major chipmakers. Samsung Electronics climbed almost 15% this week on optimism surrounding its HBM4 high-bandwidth memory rollout and expanding edge AI prospects, while SK Hynix was poised for a roughly 6% weekly advance.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 slipped 0.7% after reaching record highs above 58,000 in the prior session but remained on course for a weekly rise of about 6%, supported by renewed trade optimism following the election victory of Sanae Takaichi. The broader TOPIX fell 1% on Friday, though it was still set for a weekly gain of around 4%.

Australian shares were poised for a weekly advance, supported by strong earnings from major banks.

Elsewhere, Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 dropped 1.3% on the day but remained on track for a 3% weekly increase, supported by strong bank earnings. Singapore’s Straits Times Index fell 1%, while futures linked to India’s Nifty 50 were little changed.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index declined 2% on Friday and was poised to finish the week flat, diverging from the broader regional trend. In mainland China, the CSI 300 slipped 0.5% and the Shanghai Composite fell 0.7%, though both were still set for modest weekly gains of around 1%.

Investors were also looking ahead to upcoming U.S. consumer price index data for further guidance on the Federal Reserve’s rate outlook, after stronger-than-expected U.S. employment figures earlier in the week reduced expectations for near-term interest rate cuts.

Sources: Ayushman Ojha

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