Asia Market Open: Japan Holiday Mutes Trade as Crypto Swings and Geopolitics Dominate
Asian markets started the week quietly on Monday, November 24, with Tokyo closed for the Labor Thanksgiving Day observance. The subdued liquidity backdrop kept price action contained, even as global risk sentiment remained sensitive to sharp crypto moves, geopolitical developments, and upcoming U.S. data that could steer interest-rate expectations.
In foreign exchange, the Japanese yen edged softer with Japan–China tensions still simmering and domestic flows muted by the holiday. Broader equities remain delicate after U.S. indices slipped below key technical support late last week, despite a chip-led bounce tied to China-targeted Nvidia components. Traders are focused on U.S. retail sales and the PCE inflation gauge for fresh clues on the Federal Reserve’s policy path and the trajectory of the dollar and Treasury yields.
Geopolitics continues to shape risk appetite. Multiple airlines have suspended flights to Venezuela amid rising regional tensions and increased U.S. military activity, elevating aviation and commodity risk premiums. On the diplomatic front, a U.S. official said Ukraine negotiations had their “most productive” day yet, with narrowed differences and security guarantees central to a durable accord as talks resume. In trade policy, Canada and India have restarted negotiations after a two-year freeze, aiming to double bilateral trade to about USD 50 billion by 2030—an initiative that could re-route supply chains and support cross-border investment.
Digital assets remain volatile. Bitcoin tumbled roughly 30% from a recent peak near USD 126,000 to around USD 87,000, stoking concerns over leveraged liquidations and spillovers into wider crypto markets. Market participants are watching liquidity conditions and funding rates closely as volatility persists into the week.
Key Points – Tokyo closed for Labor Thanksgiving Day, limiting Asia session liquidity and dampening early moves. – Yen slightly weaker; risk tone cautious after U.S. indices fell through support despite a chip-led rebound tied to China-compliant Nvidia products. – Airlines suspend flights to Venezuela amid rising tensions; geopolitical risk elevates aviation and commodity uncertainty. – Ukraine talks reported as the “most productive” yet, with security guarantees flagged as essential; discussions resume this week. – Canada and India revive trade negotiations targeting USD 50 billion in bilateral commerce by 2030. – Bitcoin plunges about 30% from near USD 126,000 to around USD 87,000, raising the risk of crypto liquidations and broader volatility.






