South Korea 554 billion dollars week from hell


South Korea 554 billion dollars week from hell
South Korea’s $554 Billion Week From Hell – Moby

South Korea has spent the first two months of this year as the envy of every emerging market on Earth, with the AI ​​chip super-cycling to 50% annual gains that have global investors acting as if they’ve discovered a cheat code. Then, the peak of the shipping lane wiped out $553 billion in two days and reminded everyone that no bull market can stay in touch with a closed strait.

In late February, South Korea became the market partner for not talking about their portfolio at dinner. The KOSPI was up 50% year-to-date, driven almost entirely by global hunger for memory chips and a domestic retail investor base that decided leverage was a personality trait. Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, which together control nearly 80% of high-bandwidth memory revenue, were the two main characters. Everything was going beautifully.

Then the US-Israeli war with Iran entered its fifth day, Iranian forces mined the Strait of Hormuz and found the market “beautiful” to be a temporary state. On Tuesday, the KOSPI fell 7.2%. On Wednesday, it fell another 12.1%, tripping circuit breakers for the first time since August 2024, closing at 5,093 after hitting a year-to-date high of 6,347 in less than a week. The KOSDAQ fell nearly 14%. Samsung dropped 11.7% in one session. Currency markets were shaken as the won fell to 1,500 per dollar, a level not seen in 17 years. About $554 billion in market value was wiped out in 48 hours because a body of water 4,200 miles from Seoul was not recently pressure tested, even though it slightly undercut the entire South Korean market.

Imagine you own a milk factory. The factory is very profitable… in fact, the most profitable candy factory of its kind on earth. But 70% of the fuel that drives it comes through one door, and that door can be closed at any time by a third party, for reasons unrelated to your candy factory or your candy-related business decisions or really anything you control. Now imagine that you also let your retail customers borrow money to buy shares in your candy factory, and many did, and now the door is closed.

Now, instead of a candy factory, picture the entire financial structure of South Korea.

The geopolitical shock brightened the game, but it was the market structure that burned it. Foreign and domestic institutions were net sellers for months. The entire 50% rally was essentially a construction project of retail investors, built on leverage, focused on two names, and to a world where Hormuz remains open, because of course it will. When the market fell on Tuesday, the margin calls began. Forced liquidity pushed prices down. Lower rates have created more margin calls. As of Wednesday, the business no longer had anything to do with the basics. It was just people selling everything to survive the event. Technically, this is called “forced endangerment.” We prefer to call it the fear of a white hot market crash.

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