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Retail Investors Hit Borrowing Limits at S.Korean Brokerages, Think Tank

SEOUL, June 10 (Reuters) - Leveraged stock investments by South Korean retail investors have reached their limits set at local ​brokerage firms as the country's world-beating stock ‌market rally stretches borrowing capacity, a think tank said on Wednesday.

"There are caps at each brokerage firm, which are being ​strictly regulated. The caps have been reached ​at each brokerage firm, so it is difficult ⁠for retail investors to borrow more from brokerage ​firms for investment," President of the Korea Capital Market ​Institute Kim Sei-wan told press conference.

The KOSPI has risen 83% so far this year, after rising 76% last year, emerging ​as the world's best performer in an AI-driven ​rally and drawing huge inflows of retail investment in domestic chipmaker stocks ‌such ⁠as Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix.

Retail investments in the KOSPI have reached 79 trillion won ($51.8 billion) so far this year, leading the rally in the benchmark ​index, even ​as foreigners ⁠sold 124 trillion won of shares for profit-taking. Last year, retail investors sold ​26 trillion won of KOSPI shares.

Borrowed investments ​by ⁠retail investors in the KOSPI market stood at a record 29 trillion won as of Tuesday, up 71% ⁠from ​17 trillion won at the end ​of 2025, according to data from the Korea Financial Investment Association.

($1 = ​1,524.6900 won)

Reporting by Jihoon Lee; Editing by Jacqueline Wong

Source: Reuters


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