- South Korea's benchmark stock index recorded a slight increase of 0.31% ahead of the Fed's key interest rate decision announcement, closing at 6,661.32 points. Overall, the market displayed low volatility with a wait-and-see stance.
- Foreign institutions continued to show a net outflow in the spot market, with a one-day sell-off amounting to 799.487 billion Korean Won. Coupled with the geopolitical stalemate in the Middle East elevating expected energy import costs, the Korean Won weakened against the US dollar, declining to the level of 1,476.7.
- South Korea's sovereign bond yields followed the global long-term interest rate center upward, with three-year and ten-year benchmark government bond yields widening to 3.552% and 3.872%, respectively, as the market prices tail risk ahead of Jerome Powell's last interest rate meeting as Fed Chair.
Foreign Capital Outflows and Liquidity Restructuring
At the current complex crossroads of macroeconomic cycles, South Korea's capital markets are undergoing significant liquidity structure adjustments. International institutional investors recorded a net sell-off of nearly 800 billion Korean Won in a single trading day on South Korea's KOSPI Index, reflecting the convergence of risk appetite for emerging market equity assets under the dual pressures of a strong dollar cycle and geopolitical uncertainty. The continuous withdrawal of foreign capital not only suppresses the actual upside space of the index but also forces domestic institutional investors to play a more crucial role in absorbing liquidity in heavily weighted stocks. If the capital outflow trend fails to stabilize by the second quarter, further reassessment of South Korea's domestic credit environment and broad index valuation center may be inevitable.
Tail Risk Pricing in the Monetary Policy Cycle
This week's market focus is heavily centered on the Fed's interest rate guidance. Given that recent energy prices remain high due to the geopolitical stalemate in Iran, the market broadly expects the Fed to keep the current benchmark interest rate unchanged to prevent a secondary rebound of import inflation. Notably, this will also be Jerome Powell's last FOMC meeting as Fed Chair. Market funds are pricing in risks during this significant personnel change period to guard against possible tweaks in the monetary policy framework during the transition. In this period of policy opacity, investors tend to reduce high-beta asset positions, preferring to hold cash or short-duration fixed-income products.
Anticipatory Moves in Blue-Chip Earnings Season
The slight rise in the South Korean stock market conceals intense underlying sector divergence. In the tech sector, Samsung Electronics (005930:KS), the largest index weight, fell slightly by 0.11%. The market is waiting for the detailed first-quarter financial report to be released later this week to confirm its profit recovery progress in advanced process and high-bandwidth memory (HBM) areas. In contrast, SK Hynix (000660:KS), its major competitor, rose by 0.08%, indicating a relative preference for pure storage stocks ahead of earnings disclosure. The performance of technology blue-chip stocks not only determines the short-term direction of the stock index but also serves as a critical verification indicator of the global semiconductor cycle recovery strength.
Rise in Term Premiums in the Fixed Income Market
In tandem with foreign capital reductions in the equity market, South Korea's fixed-income market is also under pressure. The benchmark three-year government bond yield climbed 2.6 basis points from the previous trading day to 3.552%, and the ten-year government bond yield simultaneously increased by 1.3 basis points to 3.872%. The overall upward shift in the yield curve directly reflects market concern over the potential prolongation of the high inflation environment. Against the backdrop of increasing fragility in the global energy supply chain, as an economy highly dependent on energy imports, South Korea's imported inflation pressures may force the Bank of Korea to maintain a tighter liquidity environment for a longer period, further squeezing the capital gain potential in the domestic bond market.




