Abstract:Asian markets ended mixed, but mostly higher as investors across the region reacted to the news that President Biden and U.S. lawmakers struck a tentative deal to raise the debt ceiling in the U.S. The deal will be voted on later this week and if passed will allow the U.S. government to avoid a potentially catastrophic financial scenario.

Asian markets ended mixed, but mostly higher as investors across the region reacted to the news that President Biden and U.S. lawmakers struck a tentative deal to raise the debt ceiling in the U.S. The deal will be voted on later this week and if passed will allow the U.S. government to avoid a potentially catastrophic financial scenario.
Japans Nikkei finished the day with a 1% gain, leading the region. The Nikkei continues rising to new heights, and has now reached levels not seen since July 1990. Shares of Softbank Group surged 8.2% higher, while Sony shares retreated by 0.7%. Among the major exporters Toyota lost 0.4%, Panasonic climbed 0.8% higher, and Canon tacked on 1%.
In Australia the S&P/ASX 200 rose by 0.9%, with the big four banks supporting the broader market. Shares of ANZ were 1.2% higher, NAB added 1.3%, Commonwealth Bank advanced by 1.4%, and Westpac had a 1.2% gain. The major miners also provided support for the broader market, with BHP rising by 1.4% and Rio Tinto adding 1.2%.
Mainland China was one of the weak spots in the region as it delivered a mixed performance. The benchmark Shanghai Composite rose by 0.3%, but the smaller cap Shenzhen Composite retreated by 0.8%. Over in Hong Kong the Hang Seng also underperformed, dropping by 1% to lead losses for the region.
In South Korea the Kospi remained unchanged as markets there remained closed for a public holiday, while Taiwans Taiex rose by 0.8%.
Southeast Asian markets ended the day mixed as Malaysia‘s KLCI edged higher by 0.2%, while Singapore’s Straits Times Index retreated 0.4%.


Walk into any forex marketing pitch in India in 2026 and the first claim you will hear is some variation of "we are regulated by multiple international authorities". The implication is obvious — multiple regulators equals safer brokers. But after WikiFX has documented thousands of complaint cases from Indian and other South Asian traders, one inconvenient truth has become impossible to ignore: Not all regulatory licences are equal. Not even close. A broker can claim "regulated by 5 authorities" — and if those 5 authorities are all offshore-tier (MISA, Vanuatu, Seychelles, Saint Lucia, Comoros), it offers approximately the same protection as no regulation at all. Meanwhile, a single FCA or ASIC licence carries more practical investor protection than a dozen offshore registrations stacked together. This is the WikiFX 2026 ranking of forex brokers by genuine regulatory credibility — measured not by quantity of licences, but by the strength and enforcement weight of the regulators behind

Clarify Capital stands out as a recommended forex broker with an impressive 7.9 out of 10 overall rating, backed by overwhelmingly positive feedback from its trading community. With 200 total reviews and a remarkably low negative rate of just 0.5%, the broker has established itself as a reliable choice for traders seeking a trustworthy platform. The sentiment distribution speaks volumes, with 194 positive reviews compared to only 1 negative and 5 neutral responses, demonstrating consistent satisfaction across its user base. Traders particularly praise Clarify Capital for three standout qualities: responsive customer support that addresses concerns promptly, a solid reputation for safety that instills confidence in clients, and straightforward deposit and withdrawal processes that make fund management hassle-free.

The rupee bounced to 95.20 but RBI's forex reserves took a brutal $8.1 billion hit in a single week — here is what every Indian investor needs to understand right now.

No, we are not kidding! The rupee has indeed hit this low, from 90 to 95 against the US dollar, the fastest in nearly a decade, highlighting the slump due to rising crude oil prices and global uncertainty from the series of adverse events related to the geopolitical conflict in the Middle East. It just took five months for the rupee to weaken from 90 to 95, the sharpest five-point depreciation since the 2013 taper tantrum. During this period, the rupee declined from 60 to 65 within a month amid concerns over India’s current account deficit and large capital outflows.