Nikkei 225 retreats as Asian markets weigh BOJ, Fed and US-Iran deal

June 16, 2026

Asian stocks struggled for direction on Tuesday as investors moved past the first burst of optimism over a preliminary US-Iran peace deal and turned back to central banks.

The region had rallied on Monday after hopes of a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz pushed oil lower and lifted Wall Street.

That mood proved harder to sustain after the Bank of Japan raised rates to 1%, shifting investor attention back to policy risks, with the Reserve Bank of Australia and the Federal Reserve still due to announce decisions this week.

Weak Chinese activity data also weighed on Hong Kong shares, while oil steadied near three-month lows as shippers warned that confidence in Hormuz may take time to rebuild.

Policy risk overtakes peace relief

The early relief from the US-Iran framework faded as investors looked for proof that the agreement can hold.

Brent crude was little changed near $83 a barrel after settling at its lowest level since March, showing that traders have removed some war premium but are not yet pricing a full return to normal energy flows.

Westpac analysts wrote in a note cited by Reuters that the pact was “an important diplomatic breakthrough” that should remove a source of volatility.

They also warned that its durability would be tested because issues including Iran’s nuclear programme still need further negotiation.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was flat after giving up early gains.

Hong Kong stocks weighed on the benchmark after China’s retail sales and fixed-asset investment data missed expectations.

Japan’s rate path moves centre stage

Japan was the main policy focus after the Bank of Japan raised interest rates to 1%, the highest level in 31 years.

The Nikkei 225 slipped 0.3% from a record high as investors assessed whether policymakers would signal further tightening under Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida.

The decision is unusually sensitive because Governor Kazuo Ueda will miss the post-meeting briefing while undergoing medical treatment.

Deputy Governor Shinichi Uchida will instead face questions on whether the bank still sees room to tighten after the peace deal lowered oil prices.

Mitsubishi UFJ analysts said that they did not expect major changes to the BOJ’s assessment.

They said Uchida’s explanation of the rate decision would probably follow Ueda’s June 3 speech.

Wall Street rally faces Asia caution

The cautious tone in Asia came after a strong US session.

The S&P 500 rose 1.7%, the Nasdaq Composite jumped 3.1%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at a record high as investors welcomed lower oil prices and easing inflation risks.

Europe’s Stoxx 600 also ended at a record.

Still, Asian traders had local risks to digest. The Reserve Bank of Australia is expected to hold rates at 4.35% after three increases this year.

The dollar index held near 99.69, while the 10-year Treasury yield was broadly steady around 4.47%.

Gold edged higher to about $4,311 an ounce, showing that investors have not fully abandoned defensive positions.

For now, Asia’s message is simple: the peace rally has bought time, but central banks will decide whether it lasts.

The post Nikkei 225 retreats as Asian markets weigh BOJ, Fed and US-Iran deal appeared first on Invezz