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S.Korea Hit by Steepest Stocks Selloff since 2008, Currency Tumbles

  • KOSPI down 19.9% from record closing high
  • Won weakens past 1,500
  • Foreign selling in March heaviest on record

SEOUL, March 31 (Reuters) - South Korean markets buckled on Tuesday, with shares sliding ​toward their worst monthly performance since the global financial crisis and ‌the won sinking to post-crisis lows, as the Middle East war sent investors fleeing worldwide.

The benchmark KOSPI sank 4.3% on Tuesday, taking its fall from late February's record closing high to 19.9%, ​a whisker short of confirming, on some measures, a bear market.

The monthly ​drop of 19% is the largest since 2008 and the won ⁠slumped around 1% to trade weaker than 1,500 to the dollar - levels previously ​broached only in the aftermath of the global financial crisis in 2009 and the ​late 1990s Asian crisis.

The market's earlier gains this year only deepened the rout, as soaring energy prices and fading risk tolerance left global investors with nowhere to hide, forcing a rapid ​unwinding of once-favoured assets.

Foreigners sold a net 35.9 trillion won ($23.5 billion) in KOSPI ​shares this month, exchange data shows, the largest outflow on record and one which has pushed ‌the ⁠currency lower.

The rush out is positioning-driven, said Rajiv Batra, head of Asia and co-head of global emerging markets equity strategy at J.P. Morgan in Singapore.

"The market didn't look into how much growth damage is there, earnings damage is there ... wherever people ​were significantly positioned and ​that money was ⁠in profit, that's where people started doing de-risking."

Analysis from Goldman Sachs shows foreign selling has been heaviest in market-darling chipmakers ​Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, driving foreign ownership in the ​pair to ⁠its lowest since 2022.

Both dropped sharply on Tuesday, shedding 5.2% and 7.6% respectively and both are down more than 20% through March. Even so, the sheer scale of ⁠the rally ​before the Iran war has left them sharply ​higher for the year, with the broader KOSPI still up about 20%.

($1 = 1,529.1100 won)

Reporting ​by Jihoon Lee; Writing and additional reporting by Tom Westbrook; Editing by Shri Navaratnam

Source: Reuters


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