SEOUL, January 29 (AJP) - Asian equities traded unevenly in early Thursday sessions following the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) decision, with key indices swinging between gains and losses as investors struggled to digest a flood of corporate earnings alongside a renewed rebound in the U.S. dollar.
The previous rally in South Korea and Taiwan gave way to choppy, directionless trading, while mainland China and Japan remained clouded by uncertainty, making it difficult for investors to establish a clear near-term trend.
As of 10:30 a.m. Seoul time, the Korean won strengthened, with the dollar down 4 won at 1,429.50.
As widely expected, the Federal Reserve on Wednesday entered a new holding pattern on interest rates, signaling little urgency to resume cuts following contentious reductions at its previous three meetings. The decision to keep the benchmark federal funds rate unchanged at 3.50–3.75 percent was approved by a 10–2 vote.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell said recent data had painted a somewhat brighter picture than at the last meeting, citing firmer economic growth and tentative signs of stabilization in the labor market.
Despite U.S. President Donald Trump’s continued endorsement of a weaker dollar as “great,” the greenback found firm support in offshore trading. This followed Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s emphatic “Absolutely not” when asked whether Washington was deliberately encouraging yen strength to prevent an unwinding of yen-carry trades. The remarks caused the won’s early gains to fade.
South Korea’s benchmark KOSPI was trading at 5,143 as of 10:30 a.m., down 0.54 percent, as the market took a breather after a monthlong record-setting rally. After hitting all-time highs for two consecutive sessions on Tuesday and Wednesday, the index appeared to have entered a consolidation phase.
Performance among South Korea’s semiconductor blue chips diverged. Samsung Electronics fell 1.7 percent to 159,600 won, as its record fourth-quarter and full-year chip earnings were overshadowed by those of its local rival. SK Hynix, by contrast, rose 0.5 percent to 845,000 won, continuing to benefit from record earnings and a stronger fundamental valuation.
Hyundai Motor climbed 2.5 percent to 505,000 won ahead of its earnings release and conference call later in the day, where it is expected to outline its robotics roadmap. Market attention remained focused on the 2 p.m. announcement, with investors cautious after its key subsidiary Kia reported a nearly 30 percent year-on-year drop in operating profit.
Secondary battery stocks came under heavier selling pressure. LG Energy Solution plunged 4.3 percent to 412,500 won, once again relinquishing its position as South Korea’s third-largest company by market capitalization to Hyundai Motor. Samsung SDI also slid 4.0 percent to 380,500 won.
In contrast, the tech-heavy KOSDAQ defied the broader cautious mood, rising 1.2 percent to 1,147, buoyed by government stimulus expectations and renewed momentum in robotics-related shares. Rainbow Robotics, in which Samsung Electronics is the largest shareholder, surged 11.0 percent to 772,000 won after Samsung publicly reaffirmed its commitment to the humanoid robot market.
Robotics optimism also lifted EcoPro BM, which jumped 6.1 percent to 243,000 won, reclaiming the top spot in KOSDAQ market capitalization for the first time in four months.
In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 hovered in positive territory, up 0.2 percent at 53,480. After a weak open, the index reversed course following Bessent’s dismissal of bets against the yen. The yen stood at 153.30 per dollar, up 0.15 yen, though it is expected to weaken again as the dollar regains momentum offshore.
Japanese exporters rallied on the currency shift. Toyota Motor rose 2.1 percent to 3,417 yen, while Honda Motor gained 1.5 percent to 1,522 yen. Among semiconductor stocks, Advantest stood out, surging after reporting operating profit of 78.7 billion yen, beating market consensus by 65 percent.
Taiwan’s TAIEX slipped 0.6 percent to 32,610, paring part of Wednesday’s 2 percent surge. TSMC edged down 0.55 percent to 1,810 Taiwan dollars, while Foxconn fell 1.1 percent to 223 Taiwan dollars. MediaTek, however, rose 0.85 percent to 1,795 Taiwan dollars on forecasts that it will remain the world’s top mobile chip shipper through 2026.
Mainland Chinese markets were mixed. The Shanghai Composite eased 0.15 percent to 4,145, while the Shenzhen Composite added 0.35 percent to 14,396. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index slipped 0.4 percent to 27,707, cooling after the previous session’s nearly 3 percent rally driven by safe-haven demand for gold.
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