- The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) rose by 30.6% in April, marking the largest monthly gain since January 1998, with a year-to-date increase of over 56.35%, primarily driven by a semiconductor supercycle stemming from global investments in artificial intelligence infrastructure.
- Impacted by a 7% spike in international crude oil prices during intraday trading and a net outflow of 1.45 trillion won by foreign investors in a single day, the KOSPI index on Thursday retreated by 1.38% to 6,598.87 points, with both tech and traditional manufacturing heavyweights under pressure.
- The Ministry of Economy and Finance (MOEF) of Korea announced plans to launch around-the-clock local USD/KRW spot trading ahead of schedule in late June. Concurrently, the yield on Korea's 3-year and 10-year government bonds rose to 3.599% and 3.931%, respectively, reflecting growing expectations of imported inflation.
Capital Flows and Market Valuation Reevaluation
Korea's capital market is undergoing extreme pricing reevaluation driven by a mix of industrial fundamentals and macro tail risks. The 30.6% monthly rise in the KOSPI index in April is second only to the rebound post the 1998 Asian financial crisis. This astounding liquidity premium is nearly entirely concentrated in the semiconductor and AI hardware supply chain. However, Thursday's market movement exposed the vulnerability of overvalued assets to external shocks. With Brent crude prices soaring to a four-year high due to Middle East geopolitical tensions, foreign capital net withdrew over 1.45 trillion won from the KOSPI market in a single trading day. This large-scale profit-taking and risk-averse portfolio adjustment resulted in only 194 out of 890 traded stocks rising, significantly narrowing market breadth and suggesting international macro hedge funds are reducing their exposure to high-beta emerging market equities.
Performance Support from the Semiconductor Cycle
Despite short-term liquidity disturbances, the core financial data of Korean tech behemoths continue to provide solid support for the broader market. Samsung Electronics (005930:KS) recently disclosed that its chip division's operating profit soared 48 times year-on-year, driven by an explosion in demand for high-bandwidth memory (HBM) and enterprise solid-state drives, leading to a record high company-wide profit for the quarter. However, amid macro risk-aversion sentiment, Samsung Electronics' stock still fell 2.43% on the day, and SK Hynix (000660:KS) slightly declined by 0.54%. This temporary divergence between fundamental benefits and stock price movements indicates that the anchor driving tech stock pricing has shifted from single profit expectations to narratives around rising risk-free interest rates and global supply chain disruptions.
Currency Mechanism Reform and Sovereign Debt Pressure
In the currency and fixed-income markets, policy adjustments and inflation expectations have formed a new competitive landscape. An official from the Ministry of Economy and Finance (MOEF) confirmed that the USD/KRW 24-hour spot trading platform, designed to enhance market depth, will be launched earlier than planned in late June. This move is expected to help stabilize excessive exchange rate fluctuations in the short term, with the won trading at 1,483.3 per dollar on the domestic settlement platform, appreciating by 0.35% from the previous day. However, on the bond front, Korea's government bonds faced significant sell-offs weighed down by concerns over imported inflation triggered by international oil prices. The benchmark 3-year government bond yield climbed to 3.599%, while the 10-year bond yield jumped 8.9 basis points to 3.931%. The overall upward shift of the yield curve suggests that the Bank of Korea may face tighter pressures than previously priced in by the market in the coming quarters.
Traditional Manufacturing and Energy Cost Constraints
In sharp contrast to the previous exuberance in the semiconductor sector, Korea's traditional heavy asset manufacturing industry is facing severe cost pressures against the backdrop of soaring oil prices. Hyundai Motor (005380:KS) and Kia Motors (000270:KS) stocks significantly declined by 4.50% and 3.25%, respectively, LG Energy Solution (373220:KS) fell by 2.64%, and steel manufacturer POSCO Holdings (005490:KS) dropped by 1.49%. These industries, highly sensitive to commodity prices and logistics costs, are seeing their gross margin recovery logic disrupted by oil prices nearing $120 per barrel. If Middle East oil exports are substantially interrupted, the capital expenditure cycle of Korea's energy-import-dependent, export-oriented economy's industrial sector may be forced to delay significantly.




