Economic news

South Korea's KOSPI Drops 20% from June Peak as Chips Drag

  • KOSPI falls over 20% from record close in June
  • Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix drop on AI worries
  • Finance Minister vows to monitor risks related to leveraged ETFs
  • Won hits over one-month high on SK Hynix share sale

SEOUL, July 8 (Reuters) - South Korea's benchmark KOSPI stock index ‌fell more than 5% on Wednesday, dropping more than 20% from a record close in late June and signalling that the market is in bear territory.

The KOSPI closed 409.52 points, or 5.35%, lower at 7,246.79, its lowest close since May ​20, as sharp swings in chipmaker stocks over AI worries and growing concerns about risky investment ​products rattled investors.

The index is now down more than 20% from its record close ⁠of 9,114.55 on June 22, a threshold commonly considered to confirm a bearish market.

Trading was choppy on ​Wednesday, with the index opening lower before rebounding to rise as much as 1.8%. It then fell as ​much as 6.1%, triggering a "sidecar" trading curb that temporarily halted algorithmic trading.

Chipmaker Samsung Electronics fell 6.3% and peer SK Hynix lost 5.7%, after U.S. semiconductor stocks slumped overnight, with the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index dropping 4.7% as investors questioned whether AI-related spending ​could be sustained.

"There seems to be spill-over effects from a slump in the previous session, which came ​despite Samsung Electronics' strong earnings, while there are worries about a slowdown in memory price growth and uncertainty over an ‌earnings 'peak-out,'" said ⁠Han Ji-young, an analyst at Kiwoom Securities.

South Korean Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol pledged to closely monitor risk factors that could heighten stock market volatility, citing worries about recently introduced single-stock leveraged exchange-traded funds (ETFs) linked to chipmaker stocks.

On Tuesday, the KOSPI closed 4.9% lower after triggering a circuit breaker for the sixth time this year ​and the 12th in history.

"Supply-demand ​dynamics of the dollar-won ⁠market are expected to shift in the second half," Deputy Finance Minister Moon Ji-sung said, adding that pressure from foreign investors taking profits and rebalancing should ease ​going forward.

Moon pointed to won demand from an upcoming U.S. share sale by SK ​Hynix, which ⁠is set to be one of the world's largest new share sales.

On Wednesday, dollar-selling related to the U.S. share sale by SK Hynix emerged in the country's dollar-won forwards market, Reuters reported.

Foreigners were net buyers of shares worth ⁠335.9 billion ​won ($223.86 million) after 13 straight sessions of selloff.

The won strengthened past ​the 1,500 mark and traded 1.2% higher at 1,498.5 per dollar on the onshore settlement platform , hitting its strongest level since May ​29.

($1 = 1,500.5000 won)

Reporting by Jihoon Lee and Yena Park; Editing by Janane Venkatraman, Ronojoy Mazumdar and Subhranshu Sahu

Source: Reuters


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