HONG KONG — Asia shares were trading mostly lower Friday, tracking sharp Wall Street losses on a sell-off of technology-related stocks that investors fear could lose out from artificial intelligence disruptions. U.S. futures were mostly unchanged.
Tokyo's Nikkei 225 fell 0.8% to 57,165.13 on Friday, after it passed the 58,000 mark for the first time early Thursday. SoftBank Group, which has a focus on AI, fell 6.8% even as the company reported a quarterly profit Thursday building on its investments in OpenAI, among other gains.
South Korea's Kospi rose 0.4% to 5,545.49, after crossing 5,500 on Thursday, driven by gains in technology-related stocks. Samsung Electronics, the Kospi's largest listed company, was up 1.2%.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 1.8% to 26,547.97. The Shanghai Composite index was down 0.7% to 4,105.04.
In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 traded 1.4% lower at 8,919.30.
On Thursday, Wall Street saw sharp losses as AI worries dampened sentiment. The S&P 500 fell for its second-worst day since Thanksgiving, dropping 1.6%, or 108.71, to 6,832.76, but it's still near an all-time high that was set last month. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 1.3%, or 669.42, to 49,451.98. The Nasdaq composite lost 2%, or 469.32, to 22,597.15.
American technology giant Cisco Systems sank 12.3% even though it reported better-than-expected quarterly results, as investors were concerned about its ongoing profitability.
Shares of technology company AppLovin plunged 19.7% despite better-than-expected quarterly profits as worries over AI undercutting its business weighed on its stock price.