Asian stocks advanced unevenly on Wednesday as Japan’s Nikkei 225 jumped 2.14% to a record high, even as oil-market tension and patchy regional data kept investors from calling it a clean risk-on session.
The broader Topix rose 1.52%, helped by Wall Street’s latest record run and sustained enthusiasm for AI-linked shares. Elsewhere, the picture was less convincing.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng slipped 0.98%, Australia’s ASX 200 edged up 0.36% after weaker growth data, and South Korean markets were closed for a holiday.
The result was a rally with momentum, but not much comfort.
Nikkei hits a high, but mood is cautious
Japan gave the region its strongest headline as the Nikkei’s record high extended a rally that has leaned heavily on technology, semiconductor, and AI-adjacent shares, with investors still willing to pay up for companies tied to the global hardware cycle.
The Topix’s gain suggested the move was broader than a handful of mega-cap exporters, although the tone across Asia was far less uniform than Tokyo’s performance implied.
Hong Kong moved the other way, with the Hang Seng down nearly 1% as investors stayed wary of China-linked demand and higher energy costs.
In Australia, the ASX barely moved after data showed the economy grew 2.5% from a year earlier and 0.3% in the March quarter.
South Korea’s closure for Election Day also thinned regional trading.
The message was clear: Asia is rising, but this is a fragmented rally, not a full-throated endorsement of risk.
Iran’s shadow over the strait
The bigger market risk still sits thousands of miles away in the Strait of Hormuz, where roughly a fifth of global oil supply normally passes.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio told Congress that Iran had mined large segments of the waterway and fired on commercial vessels.
The language has kept oil traders on edge even as equity investors continue to look through the shock.
Crude prices reflected that tension. West Texas Intermediate rose 1.14% to $94.82 a barrel, while Brent climbed 1.05% to $97.01.
Those levels are not yet catastrophic for markets, but they are high enough to complicate the inflation story for central banks and the earnings story for energy-importing economies in Asia.
Allianz Research has warned that a prolonged disruption around Hormuz could push Brent above $130 a barrel in a tail-risk scenario, although its base case still assumes markets eventually adapt.
Patrick Munnelly of TickMill put the investor problem more sharply:
“The market’s problem is not only the level of oil but also the volatility; each reversal makes it harder for investors and central banks to treat the shock as temporary.”
That is why the oil move matters beyond commodities. It feeds into bond yields, currencies, rate expectations and consumer confidence.
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