Japan's Nikkei drops below 67,000 and Asian chip stocks sell off as AI-valuation doubts and Middle East risk weigh on markets
Japan's Nikkei 225 fell below 67,000 on July 16, led by semiconductor losses, as investors questioned whether AI-sector earnings justified continued equity advances; South Korea's Kospi was also hit, and US markets stalled as Bloomberg's Markets Wrap cited AI-trade scrutiny and Middle East uncertainty as the joint drivers
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Summary
Japan's Nikkei 225 fell below 67,000 on July 16 as semiconductor stocks led losses across Asian equity markets. South Korea's Kospi was also down, hit by the same chip-stock selloff. Bloomberg's Markets Wrap attributed the pullback to two overlapping pressures: investor doubt over whether AI-sector earnings justified continued equity gains, and Middle East uncertainty following the IRGC energy export threat and widening US-Iran conflict. US markets stalled in parallel.
Why it matters
The selloff tests whether the AI-trade premium built into chip stocks is sustainable as earnings season opens. A simultaneous Middle East risk premium on energy tightens the margin for central banks and equity investors in export-heavy Asian economies.
What to watch
- Semiconductor earnings from key Japan and Korea chip makers in the coming weeks
- Whether the Nikkei 67,000 level holds or the selloff deepens into a broader de-risking
- US AI company earnings guidance as the driver of Asian chip stock direction