According to Wall Street Journal and Financial Times reports on July 6, South Korea's stock market faces severe volatility warnings despite strong gains. The KOSPI index rose 165% over the past year, but experienced extreme daily swings; it moved 2% or more on 77 trading days in the period, compared to just 5 days for the S&P 500. Daily moves of 5% or more occurred 23 times for the KOSPI versus zero for the S&P 500.
Foreign investors are exiting the market rapidly, with net selling exceeding $100 billion in the first half of 2026 alone and $30 billion in June. WSJ noted leverage ETFs amplify volatility, and regulators including the Bank of Korea have expressed concern. The concentration risk remains acute: Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix now account for over half the KOSPI index, up from 36% at year start.