---
title: "Korea has become the market that prices global AI sentiment"
description: "The Kospi is roughly 25 percent below its June 19 record, erasing about $1 trillion, and is still up sharply for the year. With Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix making up more than half the index, Seoul now trades as a leveraged bet on AI memory demand."
category: "Markets"
category_url: https://boursel.com/category/markets
author: "Marcus Feldman"
published: 2026-07-19T04:52:00.000Z
updated: 2026-07-19T04:52:00.000Z
canonical: https://boursel.com/article/korea-has-become-the-market-that-prices-global-ai-sentiment
tags: ["kospi", "south-korea", "semiconductors", "artificial-intelligence", "concentration-risk"]
---
# Korea has become the market that prices global AI sentiment

The Kospi is roughly 25 percent below its June 19 record, erasing about $1 trillion, and is still up sharply for the year. With Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix making up more than half the index, Seoul now trades as a leveraged bet on AI memory demand.

South Korea's stock market spent the first half of 2026 as the best performer in
the world. It has spent the past month demonstrating why that was not
straightforwardly good news.

The Kospi is now around 25 percent below the record high it set on June 19, a
drawdown that has erased roughly $1 trillion of market value, [according to
Bloomberg data reported this
week](https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/south-korean-stocks-emerge-as-key-gauge-for-global-ai-sentiment-4799692).
The index is nevertheless still up about 62 percent for the year, which captures
how extraordinary the preceding rally was.

## Two companies, half an index

The explanation for both the ascent and the fall is concentration.

Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix together accounted for more than half of the
Kospi's weighting as of June, [according to data from Emmer Capital cited by
CNBC](https://www.cnbc.com/2026/07/09/kospi-bear-territory-ai-samsung-skhynix-chipmakers.html).
No other major developed market is anything like this concentrated. Both
companies make high-bandwidth memory, the stacked memory that sits beside AI
accelerators in data centers.

A brief explanation of why that matters. Training and running large AI models is
limited less by raw processing speed than by how fast data can be fed to the
processor. High-bandwidth memory addresses that by stacking memory chips
vertically and placing them next to the processor, widening the pipe. It is a
component with few credible suppliers, and Korea houses most of them.

The consequence is that an index which is nominally a broad measure of the
Korean economy behaves in practice like a concentrated position in AI memory
demand. When the market revises its view of how much will be spent on AI
infrastructure, Seoul revises faster and further than anywhere else.

## The drawdown was about positioning, not earnings

What makes this episode instructive is that it did not follow bad results.

Samsung reported blockbuster profit in the same week the index fell into bear
market territory, and memory pricing has continued to strengthen. The shares
fell anyway, on concerns about the durability of AI capital spending rather than
about the quarter just reported.

Analysts describe the move as a repricing of crowded positioning. "The
correction has been driven more by positioning than by a deterioration in
fundamentals," said Jung In Yun, founder of Fibonacci Asset Management Global,
who added that Korean equities had become "one of the most crowded AI trades
globally after a very strong rally, so it did not take much to trigger profit
taking." He characterized the fall as "a healthy reset rather than a fundamental
change in the outlook."

Manishi Raychaudhuri, chief executive of Emmer Capital, attributed the drawdown
to "heightened AI skepticism on the part of global investors, coupled with
extreme market concentration."

There is also a structural argument about how markets now move. Peter Kim,
global investment strategist at KB Financial Group, said "the gamification of
finance has led to such gyrations driven less by fundamentals but by news flows
and fads," pointing to retail flows, leveraged exchange-traded funds and AI
concentration as reasons that swings of 5 to 10 percent have become common. The
Kospi volatility index has risen more than 200 percent since the start of the
year.

## The coupling with US tech has tightened

The reason this matters beyond Korea is that the relationship with US technology
stocks has become much closer.

The 60-day correlation between the Kospi and the Nasdaq 100 has reached 0.46,
against a five-year average of 0.16, according to the Bloomberg analysis. The
same work found the Nasdaq 100's sensitivity to below-trend Kospi returns
recently climbed to its highest level since 1990.

A correlation of 0.46 is far from lockstep, and these statistics are sensitive
to the window chosen. But the direction is clear: two markets that used to move
largely independently are now substantially driven by the same variable, which
is the expected path of AI infrastructure spending. Because Seoul trades while
New York sleeps, that gives the Kospi an informational role it did not
previously have.

## What to take from it

For investors outside Korea, the practical use is as an indicator rather than a
destination. Seoul offers an early, high-sensitivity reading on AI sentiment,
for precisely the reason it is risky to hold: the index is dominated by two
firms selling into one demand story.

The caution is symmetrical. An index that amplifies optimism amplifies its
withdrawal, and a 25 percent drawdown arriving on top of blockbuster earnings is
a reminder that the market is pricing expectations about spending years ahead,
not results already banked. Nothing in the past month settles whether the AI
build-out continues at pace. It only shows how quickly the price of assuming it
can change.

## Sources

- [Why the world's best-performing stock market this year fell into bear territory](https://www.cnbc.com/2026/07/09/kospi-bear-territory-ai-samsung-skhynix-chipmakers.html)
- [South Korean stocks emerge as key gauge for global AI sentiment](https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/south-korean-stocks-emerge-as-key-gauge-for-global-ai-sentiment-4799692)

