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Asia wrap: Asia starts asking questions Wall Street hasn't yet

South Korea may be providing the first glimpse of what happens when the AI boom, combined with higher energy costs, becomes inflationary enough to force central banks back into tightening mode.

Rising oil prices, elevated Treasury yields, and a stronger dollar are creating a macro backdrop that is becoming increasingly difficult for equity markets to ignore.

Friday’s NFP report is shaping up as a referendum on whether Main Street is finally participating in Wall Street’s AI boom, or whether the prosperity remains concentrated in a narrow corner of the economy.

Asia starts asking questions

Wall Street closed at fresh record highs despite a combination of rising oil prices, a hawkish Federal Reserve, and inflation expectations that continue to creep higher. In a normal macro universe, that would have been enough to cool risk appetite. Instead, investors remained mesmerized by the AI boom, continuing to bid up anything connected to the buildout of the digital economy. Asia, however, appeared less willing to suspend disbelief.

Regional equities traded lower for much of the session as investors digested a market landscape in which oil remains near $95, Treasury yields hover around 4.45%, and the US dollar refuses to back away from recent gains. While traders can point to Middle East uncertainty, hawkish Fed rhetoric, or pre-NFP caution as immediate catalysts, the deeper issue may be that the major asset classes are no longer telling the same story. Bonds remain focused on inflation, energy markets on supply risk, and currencies on tighter financial conditions. Equities, meanwhile, remain captivated by a future powered by artificial intelligence and endless productivity gains. It is as if every market is looking through a different window at the same economy.

Perhaps nowhere is that tension more visible than in South Korea.

For much of the past year, Korea has become one of the purest expressions of the global AI trade. Semiconductor giants, data infrastructure spending, and the broader technology ecosystem have helped propel the KOSPI sharply higher. Yet beneath the surface, inflation pressures broadened again in May while economic activity remained resilient. The result is an increasingly uncomfortable reality for the Bank of Korea. Markets that were celebrating growth are now confronting the possibility that the same growth may force policymakers back into tightening mode.

We continue to expect the Bank of Korea to raise rates by 25 basis points in July and October, and again in the first half of 2027. That may not sound dramatic, but speculative bubbles rarely deflate because someone pops them. More often, they slowly lose altitude as liquidity conditions become less supportive. The Korean AI weather balloon may not be bursting, but policymakers could begin letting some of the hot air out.

Japan is beginning to tell a similar story. Inflation remains sticky, wages continue to firm, and the Bank of Japan remains on a path toward further normalization. For years, global investors could count on Japan supplying abundant liquidity through ultra-accommodative monetary policy. Increasingly, that assumption is being challenged. When both the BoJ and the BoK, along with the rest of global central banks, are moving toward tighter settings while the Fed remains hawkish, it starts to look less like isolated policy adjustments and more like the early stages of a broader tightening cycle.

Meanwhile, US futures are showing signs of caution as investors look ahead to Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report. The jobs data arrives at a particularly important moment because it sits at the centre of a growing divide between Wall Street and Main Street. Financial markets continue celebrating record highs, AI spending booms, and trillion-dollar opportunities. On the ground, households continue grappling with elevated living costs, expensive credit, and savings rates that remain historically low. From 30,000 feet, the economy looks increasingly prosperous. At street level, the real lived experience is considerably less convincing.

That is why this week’s payrolls report matters so much. It is not simply a jobs number. It is a test of whether the benefits of the AI boom are spreading into the broader economy or remaining concentrated among a relatively small group of companies and investors. Strong payrolls would reinforce the idea that AI investment is beginning to generate broader economic momentum. But it would also reinforce the case for higher-for-longer rates. Weak payrolls would raise a far more uncomfortable question: has Wall Street’s boom become detached from Main Street’s reality?

For now, stocks continue winning the argument. But with oil rising, yields elevated, central banks turning less accommodative, and geopolitical risks refusing to disappear, Asia’s softer tone may be a reminder that not every market is buying into the same narrative. Eventually, one side of that debate will have to blink.

Author

Stephen Innes

Stephen Innes

SPI Asset Management

With more than 25 years of experience, Stephen has a deep-seated knowledge of G10 and Asian currency markets as well as precious metal and oil markets.

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