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Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Rise in Monday Trading

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts kicked off the week sharply higher Monday morning, rising 1.60% to 2,893.65 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index.From North Asia, the gainers were led by Korea Electric Power (KEP) and travel company Tuniu (TOUR), which rose 7.8% and 6.8% respectively. They were followed by semiconductor company Himax Technologies (HIMX) and internet and data center services provider VNET Group (VNET), which were up 5.5% and 5.4% respectively.The decliners from North Asia were led by mobile app developer Cheetah Mobile (CMCM) and diagnostic imaging centers firm Concord Medical Services (CCM), which fell 2.8% and 2.0% respectively.From South Asia, the gainers were led by Canaan (CAN) and tech conglomerate Sea (SE), which rose 11% and 5.4% respectively. They were followed by telecommunications operator PLDT (PHI) and IT firm Sify Technologies (SIFY), which advanced 4.4% and 4.2% respectively.

$CAN$CCM$CMCM$HIMX$KEP$PHI$SE$SIFY$TOUR$VNET
Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Rise in Friday Trading, Marginally Lower for Week

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts were tracking higher Friday morning, rising 0.6% to 2,841.30 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index, which is edging 0.1% lower for the week so far.From North Asia, the gainers were led by solar panel maker JinkoSolar (JKS) and healthcare platform 111 (YI), which climbed 7.8% and 6.8% respectively. They were followed by utilities company Korea Electric Power (KEP) and semiconductor company ASE Technology (ASX), which advanced 4.3% and 3.4% respectively.The decliners from North Asia were led by media company Phoenix New Media (FENG) and real estate and digital security company Eason Technology (DXF), which fell 5.7% and 4.9% respectively. They were followed by education companies 51Talk Online Education Group (COE) and 17 Education & Technology Group (YQ), which were down 3.1% and 2.8% respectively.From South Asia, the gainers were led by IT firm Infosys (INFY) and lender ICICI Bank (IBN), which rose 1.3% each. They were followed by telecommunications operator Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK) and computer hardware maker Canaan (CAN), which were up 1% and 0.3% respectively.The lone decliner from South Asia was tech conglomerate Sea (SE), which dropped 2.4%.

$ASX$CAN$COE$DXF$FENG$IBN$INFY$JKS$KEP$SE$TLK$YI$YQ
Insider Trading

Sea Insider Sold Shares Worth $1,661,759, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Gang Ye, Director and Chief Operating Officer, on June 10, 2026, sold 20,000 shares in Sea (SE) for $1,661,759. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Ye has control over a total of 22,316,405 Class A common shares of the company, with 22,206,405 shares held directly and 110,000 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1703399/000119312526268446/xslF345X05/ownership.xml

$SE
Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Lower in Wednesday Trading

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts were lower Wednesday morning, declining 0.42% to 2,817.29 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index.From North Asia, the gainers were led by biopharmaceutical company Zai Lab (ZLAB) and used car marketplace Uxin (UXIN), which rose 6.4% and 6% respectively. They were followed by online brokerage UP Fintech (TIGR) and video-sharing platform Bilibili (BILI), which advanced 4.9% each.The decliners from North Asia were led by semiconductor firm Himax Technologies (HIMX) and Aurora Mobile (JG), which fell 6.1% and 5.8% respectively. They were followed by video display maker LG Display (LPL) and Eason Technology (DXF), which were down 5.6% and 4.5% respectively.From South Asia, the gainers were led by telecommunications operator Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK) and IT firm Sify Technologies (SIFY), which rose 6.1% and 2.6% respectively. They were followed by lenders ICICI Bank (IBN) and HDFC Bank (HDB), which were up 2% and 1.3% respectively.The decliners from South Asia were led by tech conglomerate Sea (SE), which dropped 2.6%, followed by telecommunications operator PLDT (PHI) and IT firm Wipro (WIT), which lost 1% and 0.2% respectively.

$BILI$DXF$HDB$HIMX$IBN$JG$LPL$PHI$SE$SIFY$TIGR$TLK$UXIN$WIT$ZLAB
Sectors

Sector Update: Consumer Stocks Mixed Pre-Bell Wednesday

Consumer stocks were mixed pre-bell Wednesday, with the State Street Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLP) 0.6% higher and the State Street Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLY) down 0.5%.Sea's (SE) Shopee division is eliminating hundreds of developer positions, affecting about 8% of the platform's developer workforce, Bloomberg reported, citing unnamed people familiar with the matter. Shares of Sea were down more than 2% premarket.Chewy (CHWY) stock was down more than 3% even after the company reported higher fiscal Q1 adjusted earnings and net sales.Starbucks (SBUX) is considering various options for its Japanese unit, including a potential stake sale valued at 400 billion yen to 500 billion yen ($2.49 billion to $3.12 billion), Bloomberg reported, citing unnamed people familiar with the matter. Starbucks shares were 0.6% higher pre-bell.

$CHWY$SBUX$SE$XLP$XLY
Commodities

Exchange-Traded Funds, Equity Futures Lower Pre-Bell Wednesday Amid Renewed US-Iran Clashes

The broad market exchange-traded fund SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) was down 1%, and the actively traded Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) retreated by 1.6% in Wednesday's premarket activity, amid renewed clashes between Iran and the US.US stock futures were also lower, with S&P 500 Index futures down 1%, Dow Jones Industrial Average futures slipping 0.9%, and Nasdaq futures retreating 1.5% before the start of regular trading.Mortgage applications rose by 10.8% in the week ended June 5 after a 2.5% decline in Memorial Day week despite an increase in average 30-year mortgage rates, according to Mortgage Bankers Association data released Wednesday.US consumer prices rose 0.5% in May, matching economists' expectations but slowing from a 0.6% increase in April, while core CPI increased 0.2%, below forecasts for a 0.3% gain and down from a 0.4% rise in the prior month.The consumer price index report for May is scheduled for an 8:30 am ET release.The weekly EIA domestic petroleum inventories report will be released at 10:30 am ET.In premarket action, bitcoin was down by 1.7%. Among cryptocurrency ETFs, the cryptocurrency fund ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (BITO) was 1.7% lower, Ether ETF (EETH) retreated by 2.4%, and Bitcoin & Ether Market Cap Weight ETF (BETH) lost 0.01%.Power Play:TechnologyThe State Street Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) retreated 2.3%, and the iShares US Technology ETF (IYW) was 2.2% lower, while the iShares Expanded Tech Sector ETF (IGM) was down 2.2%. Among semiconductor ETFs, the State Street SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD) fell 4.5%, while the iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) declined by 3.4%.Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM) shares were down more than 3% in premarket activity even after the company reported higher net revenue for the month of May and the period from January to May.Winners and Losers:ConsumerThe State Street Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLP) was up 0.4%, and the Vanguard Consumer Staples Index Fund ETF Shares (VDC) was 0.7% higher. The iShares US Consumer Staples ETF (IYK) was inactive. The State Street Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLY) lost 0.7%. The VanEck Retail ETF (RTH) was inactive, while the State Street SPDR S&P Retail ETF (XRT) retreated by 1.2%.Sea's (SE) shares were down more than 2% pre-bell. Bloomberg reported, citing unnamed people familiar with the matter, that the company's Shopee division is eliminating hundreds of developer positions, affecting about 8% of the platform's developer workforce.Health CareThe State Street Health Care Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLV) retreated by 0.2%, the Vanguard Health Care Index Fund (VHT) was down 0.1%, while the iShares US Healthcare ETF (IYH) gained 1.2%. The iShares Biotechnology ETF (IBB) was 0.8% lower.Sanofi (SNY) stock was down more than 2% premarket after the company said that it will discontinue a phase 3 trial of its experimental drug riliprubart in patients with a type of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy after an interim review found the study was unlikely to provide "sufficient efficacy."FinancialThe State Street Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLF) retreated by 0.3%. Direxion Daily Financial Bull 3X Shares (FAS) was down 1.6%, while its bearish counterpart, Direxion Daily Financial Bear 3X Shares (FAZ), was 1.5% higher.Blackstone (BX) shares were down more than 2% pre-bell after Bloomberg reported the company is divesting Interplex's information and communications technology division to BizLink for roughly $850 million, with the agreement including an additional $50 million earnout based on certain milestones.IndustrialThe State Street Industrial Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLI) retreated by 0.6%, while the Vanguard Industrials Index Fund (VIS) fell 1.6% and the iShares US Industrials ETF (IYJ) was inactive.Core & Main (CNM) stock was down more than 1% before the opening bell, after the company reported unchanged fiscal Q1 net sales.EnergyThe iShares US Energy ETF (IYE) rose 2.5%, while the State Street Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLE) was up by 0.7%.APA (APA) stock was up more than 1% before market open after the company said it has agreed to acquire Savant Alaska for about $70 million in upfront consideration, plus contingent payments related to the development of APA's eastern North Slope portfolio.CommoditiesFront-month US West Texas Intermediate crude oil gained by 2.1% to $90.02 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Natural gas was up 2.9% at $3.23 per 1 million British Thermal Units. The United States Oil Fund (USO) rose by 1.6%, while the United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG) was 2.6% higher.Gold futures for July retreated by 2.8% to $4,166.90 an ounce on the Comex. Silver futures declined by 2.3% to $63.72 an ounce. SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) was down by 2.8%, and the iShares Silver Trust (SLV) decreased by 2.4%.

Dow JonesNasdaq CompositeS&P 500$APA$BETH$BITO$BX$CNM$EEM$EETH$EXI$FAS$FAZ$GLD$IBB$IGM$IGV$IPK$IVV$IWM$IYE$IYH$IYJ$IYK$IYW$PMR$QQQ$RTH$SE$SLV$SNY$SOXX$SPY$TSM$UNG$USO$VDC$VHT$VIS$XLE$XLF$XLI$XLK$XLP$XLV$XLY$XRT$XSD
Sectors

Sector Update: Consumer

Consumer stocks were mixed pre-bell Wednesday, with the State Street Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLP) 0.5% higher and the State Street Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLY) down 0.3%.Sea's (SE) Shopee division is eliminating hundreds of developer positions, affecting about 8% of the platform's developer workforce, Bloomberg reported, citing unnamed people familiar with the matter. Shares of Sea were down more than 2% premarket.

$SE
Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Open Week Higher in Monday Trading

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts opened the week higher Monday morning, rising 0.77% to 2,840.18 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index.From North Asia, the gainers were led by travel company Tuniu (TOUR) and fintech firm J and Friends (JF), which climbed 7% and 6.5% respectively. They were followed by brand platform Baozun (BZUN) and video-sharing platform Bilibili (BILI), which advanced 4.1% and 3.8% respectively.The decliners from North Asia were led by lender Shinhan Financial Group (SHG) and utilities company Korea Electric Power (KEP), which dropped 4.5% and 3.5% respectively. They were followed by online game developer The9 (NCTY) and diagnostic imaging centers company Concord Medical Services (CCM), which lost 2.5% and 2.1% respectively.From South Asia, the gainers were led by IT firm Wipro (WIT) and computer hardware maker Canaan (CAN), which rose 5% and 2.9% respectively. They were followed by IT firm Sify Technologies (SIFY) and pharmaceutical company Dr. Reddy's Laboratories (RDY), which were up 2.8% and 0.7% respectively.The decliners from South Asia were led by telecommunications operator Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK) and tech conglomerate Sea (SE), which fell 7% and 1.9% respectively. They were followed by fintech firm Trident Digital Tech (TDTH) and telecommunications operator PLDT (PHI), which were off 0.9% and 0.3% respectively.

$BILI$BZUN$CAN$CCM$JF$KEP$NCTY$PHI$RDY$SE$SHG$SIFY$TDTH$TLK$TOUR$WIT
Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Fall in Friday Trading

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts were falling 2.14% Friday morning to 2,866.84 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index. Despite the sharp loss, the index is still up about 0.5% for the week so far.From North Asia, the gainers were led by healthcare platform 111 (YI) and lender Shinhan Financial Group (SHG), which rose 4.4% and 3.8% respectively. They were followed by travel company Tuniu (TOUR) and lender CNFinance (CNF), which were up 2.2% and 0.3% respectively.The decliners from North Asia were led by Eason Technology (DXF) and semiconductor company Himax Technologies (HIMX), which shed 36% and 9% respectively. They were followed by video display maker LG Display (LPL) and semiconductor firm ASE Technology (ASX), which fell 8.4% and 7% respectively.From South Asia, pharmaceutical company Dr. Reddy's Laboratories (RDY) increased 0.8%.The decliners from South Asia were led by fintech firm Trident Digital Tech (TDTH) and Canaan (CAN), which dropped 5.7% and 5.3% respectively. They were followed by tech conglomerate Sea (SE) and telecommunications operator Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK), which lost 3.2% and 2.9% respectively.

$ASX$CAN$CNF$DXF$HIMX$LPL$RDY$SE$SHG$TDTH$TLK$TOUR$YI
Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Higher in Thursday Trading

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts were higher Thursday morning, up 0.47% at 2,919.14 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index.From North Asia, the gainers were led by casino and resort operator Melco Resorts & Entertainment (MLCO) and lender Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG), which rose 3.3% and 2.8% respectively. They were followed by online entertainment service Bilibili (BILI) and lender Shinhan Financial Group (SHG), which were up 2.5% and 2.2% respectively.The decliners from North Asia were led by video display maker LG Display (LPL), which dropped 7.8%. It was followed by semiconductor companies Himax Technologies (HIMX) and ASE Technology (ASX), which lost 7.2% and 6.5% respectively.From South Asia, the gainers were led by tech conglomerate Sea (SE) and telecommunications operator Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK), which advanced 3.7% and 3.5% respectively. They were followed by lender HDFC Bank (HDB) and IT firm Infosys (INFY), which increased 3% and 2.9% respectively.The lone decliner from South Asia was fintech firm Trident Digital Tech (TDTH), which tumbled 13%.

$ASX$BILI$HDB$HIMX$INFY$LPL$MLCO$MUFG$SE$SHG$TDTH$TLK
Insider Trading

Sea Insider Sold Shares Worth $1,841,436, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Gang Ye, Director, Chief Operating Officer, on June 02, 2026, sold 20,000 shares in Sea (SE) for $1,841,436. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Ye has control over a total of 22,376,405 Class A ordinary shares of the company, with 22,206,405 shares held directly and 170,000 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1703399/000119312526256362/xslF345X05/ownership.xml

$SE
Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Rise Sharply in Tuesday Trading

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts were rising sharply Tuesday morning, up 1.04% to 2,925.23 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index.From North Asia, the gainers were led by semiconductor companies Himax Technologies (HIMX) and Silicon Motion Technology (SIMO), which climbed 13% and 5.7% respectively. They were followed by internet and data center services provider VNET Group (VNET) and tech company Alibaba Group (BABA), which advanced 5.1% and 4.6% respectively.The decliners from North Asia were led by education company 17 Education & Technology Group (YQ) and online brokerage UP Fintech (TIGR), which dropped 7.4% and 7% respectively. They were followed by mobile big data platform Aurora Mobile (JG) and real estate management and digital security company Eason Technology (DXF), which lost 6.5% and 3.9% respectively.From South Asia, the gainers were led by fintech firm Trident Digital Tech (TDTH) and lender HDFC Bank (HDB), which rose 7.6% and 0.5% respectively. They were followed by telecommunications operator PLDT (PHI) and IT firm Sify Technologies (SIFY), which were up 0.2% and 0.1% respectively.The decliners from South Asia were led by IT firms Wipro (WIT) and Infosys (INFY), which fell 6.9% and 2.1% respectively. They were followed by computer hardware maker Canaan (CAN) and tech conglomerate Sea (SE), which were down 2% and 1.5% respectively.

$BABA$CAN$DXF$HDB$HIMX$INFY$JG$PHI$SE$SIFY$SIMO$TDTH$TIGR$VNET$WIT$YQ
Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Rise Sharply in Monday Trading

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts opened the trading week sharply higher Monday morning, rising 1.19% to 2,889.22 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index.From North Asia, the gainers were led by electric vehicle maker NIO (NIO) and semiconductor company Himax Technologies (HIMX), which climbed 6.8% and 6.3% respectively. They were followed by fintech firm Qfin (QFIN) and entertainment streaming service Bilibili (BILI), which advanced 5.8% and 5.1% respectively.The decliners from North Asia were led by real estate management and digital security company Eason Technology (DXF) and mobile app developer Cheetah Mobile (CMCM), which shed 20% and 6.4% respectively. They were followed by solar panel maker JinkoSolar (JKS) and pharmaceutical company Takeda Pharmaceutical (TAK), which dropped 5.4% and 4.2% respectively.From South Asia, the gainers were led by tech conglomerate Sea (SE) and IT firm Infosys (INFY), which rose 5.3% and 2.5% respectively. They were followed by telecommunications operators Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK) and PLDT (PHI), which were up 0.4% and 0.1% respectively.The decliners from South Asia were led by computer hardware maker Canaan (CAN) and IT firm Sify Technologies (SIFY), which fell 3.8% and 2.9% respectively. They were followed by pharmaceutical company Dr. Reddy's Laboratories (RDY) and lender ICICI Bank (IBN), which were down 2.1% and 1.3% respectively.

$BILI$CAN$CMCM$DXF$HIMX$IBN$INFY$JKS$NIO$PHI$QFIN$RDY$SE$SIFY$TAK$TLK
Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Decline in Friday Trading; Up for Week

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts were heading lower Friday morning, declining 0.35% to 2,867.57 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index, which is up 0.5% for the week so far.From North Asia, the gainers were led by video display maker LG Display (LPL) and diagnostic imaging centers company Concord Medical Services (CCM), which advanced 11% and 3.1% respectively. They were followed by education company 17 Education & Technology Group (YQ) and tech company Baidu (BIDU), which increased 3% and 2.8% respectively.The decliners from North Asia were led by real estate management and digital security company Eason Technology (DXF) and internet and data center services provider VNET Group (VNET), which dropped 5.1% and 4.6% respectively. They were followed by biopharmaceutical company Zai Lab (ZLAB) and semiconductor company ASE Technology (ASX), which lost 3.2% and 3% respectively.From South Asia, the gainers were led by computer hardware maker Canaan (CAN) and lender HDFC Bank (HDB), which rose 3.7% and 1.4% respectively. They were followed by lender ICICI Bank (IBN) and pharmaceutical company Dr. Reddy's Laboratories (RDY), which were up 0.6% and 0.3% respectively.The decliners from South Asia were led by IT firm Wipro (WIT) and telecommunications operator Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK), which fell 5.6% and 1.8% respectively. They were followed by IT company Infosys (INFY) and tech conglomerate Sea (SE), which were down 1.7% and 0.9% respectively.

$ASX$BIDU$CAN$CCM$DXF$HDB$IBN$INFY$LPL$RDY$SE$TLK$VNET$WIT$YQ$ZLAB
Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Decline in Thursday Trading

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts were tracking lower Thursday morning, declining 0.68% to 2,861.52 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index.From North Asia, the gainers were led by real estate management and digital security company Eason Technology (DXF) and tech company Xunlei (XNET), which climbed 12.1% and 5.5% respectively. They were followed by wealth management firm Noah (NOAH) and mobile app developer Cheetah Mobile (CMCM), which advanced 3.7% and 0.7% respectively.The decliners from North Asia were led by fintech firm LexinFintech (LX) and game live-streaming service DouYu International (DOYU), which dropped 6.1% and 4.4% respectively. They were followed by brand platform 36Kr (KRKR) and fintech company Qfin (QFIN), which were down 2.5% and 2% respectively.From South Asia, the gainers were led by IT firm Wipro (WIT) and computer hardware maker Canaan (CAN), which rose 7.3% 0.5% respectively. They were followed by IT firm Sify Technologies (SIFY) and telecommunications operator PLDT (PHI), which were up 0.4% and 0.2% respectively.The decliners from South Asia were led by fintech firm Trident Digital Tech (TDTH) and tech conglomerate Sea (SE), which fell 5% and 0.9% respectively. They were followed by telecommunications operator Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK) and lender HDFC Bank (HDB), which were off 0.6% and 0.4% respectively.

$CAN$CMCM$DOYU$DXF$HDB$KRKR$LX$NOAH$PHI$QFIN$SE$SIFY$TDTH$TLK$WIT$XNET
Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in US as ADRs Fall in Wednesday Trading

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts fell Wednesday with the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index dropping 0.4% to 2,872.69.From North Asia, the gainers were led by fintech firms Qfin Holdings (QFIN) and LexinFintech (LX), which surged 24% and 10%, respectively. They were followed by internet and data center services provider VNET Group (VNET) and social media platform JOYY (JOYY), which advanced 9% and 4.3%, respectively.The decliners from North Asia were led by video display maker LG Display (LPL) and mobile big data platform Aurora Mobile (JG), which shed 11% and 9%, respectively. They were followed by semiconductor companies Himax Technologies (HIMX) and Silicon Motion Technology (SIMO), which dropped 5.1% and 4.6%, respectively.From South Asia, the gainers were led by fintech firm Trident Digital Tech (TDTH) and IT firm Infosys (INFY), which climbed 23% and 2.3%, respectively. They were followed by tech conglomerate Sea (SE) and telecommunications operator Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK), which were up 1% and 0.7%, respectively.The decliners from South Asia were led by computer hardware maker Canaan (CAN) and lender HDFC Bank (HDB), which fell 3% and 2.6%, respectively. They were followed by pharmaceutical company Dr. Reddy's Laboratories (RDY) and IT company Sify Technologies (SIFY), which were down 1.4% and 1.1%, respectively.

$CAN$HDB$HIMX$INFY$JG$JOYY$LPL$LX$QFIN$RDY$SE$SIFY$SIMO$TDTH$TLK$VNET
Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Rise Sharply in Tuesday Trading

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts were up sharply Tuesday morning, rising 1.6% to 2,895.57 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index.From North Asia, the gainers were led by fintech firm High Templar Tech (HTT) and social media company JOYY (JOYY), which climbed 24.6% and 15.6% respectively. They were followed by online brokerage UP Fintech (TIGR) and semiconductor company ASE Technology (ASX), which increased 14% and 12% respectively.The decliners from North Asia were led by property management and tech company Eason Technology (DXF) and fintech firm J and Friends (JF), which dropped more than 15% and 9% respectively. They were followed by automotive marketplace Token Cat (TC) and brand platform 36Kr (KRKR), which fell 5.8% and 3.6% respectively.From South Asia, the gainers were tech conglomerate Sea (SE) and telecommunications operator Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK), which rose 2.8% and 2.3% respectively. They were followed by lender ICICI Bank (IBN) and pharmaceutical company Dr. Reddy's Laboratories (RDY), which were up more than 1% each.The decliners from South Asia were IT firm Infosys (INFY) and fintech company Trident Digital Tech (TDTH), which fell 3% and 1.9% respectively.

$ASX$DXF$HTT$IBN$INFY$JF$JOYY$KRKR$RDY$SE$TC$TDTH$TIGR$TLK
Insider Trading

Sea Insider Sold Shares Worth $1,750,820, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Gang Ye, Director, Chief Operating Officer, on May 21, 2026, sold 20,000 shares in Sea (SE) for $1,750,820. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Ye has control over a total of 22,446,405 Class A ordinary shares of the company, with 22,206,405 shares held directly and 240,000 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1703399/000119312526237763/xslF345X05/ownership.xml

$SE
Asia Markets

Asian Equities Traded in the US as American Depositary Receipts Rise in Wednesday Trading

Asian equities traded in the US as American depositary receipts were tracking higher Wednesday morning, rising 0.63% to 2,846.43 on the S&P Asia 50 ADR Index.From North Asia, the gainers were led by real estate and digital security company Eason Technology (DXF) and mobile big data provider Aurora Mobile (JG), which advanced 10% and 1.9% respectively. They were followed by solar panel maker JinkoSolar (JKS) and fintech firm LexinFintech (LX), which increased 1.7% and 1.2% respectively.The decliners from North Asia were led by online entertainment platform Bilibili (BILI) and utilities company Korea Electric Power (KEP), which fell 6.2% and 5.3% respectively. They were followed by automotive marketplaces Token Cat (TC) and Autohome (ATHM), which were down 5% and 2.3% respectively.From South Asia, the gainers were led by computer hardware maker Canaan (CAN) and telecommunications operator Telekomunikasi Indonesia (TLK), which rose 5.2% and 1.5% respectively. They were followed by lender ICICI Bank (IBN) and IT firm Sify Technologies (SIFY), which were up 0.6% and 0.5% respectively.The decliners from South Asia were led by fintech firm Trident Digital Tech (TDTH) and IT firm Infosys (INFY), which dropped 14% and 2.6% respectively. They were followed by tech conglomerate Sea (SE) and telecommunications operator PLDT (PHI), which lost 2% and 0.4% respectively.

$ATHM$BILI$CAN$DXF$IBN$INFY$JG$JKS$KEP$LX$PHI$SE$SIFY$TC$TDTH$TLK
Insider Trading

Sea Insider Sold Shares Worth $1,753,828, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Gang Ye, Director, Chief Operating Officer, on May 18, 2026, sold 20,000 shares in Sea (SE) for $1,753,828. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Ye has control over a total of 22,476,405 Class A ordinary shares of the company, with 22,206,405 shares held directly and 270,000 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1703399/000119312526231659/xslF345X05/ownership.xml

$SE

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