A currency dealer looks at an electronic board displaying the exchange rate between the U.S. dollar and South Korean won and the Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) at the dealing room of a bank in Seoul, South Korea, June 8, 2026. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji

South Korea's KOSPI craters over 8% as Fed fears spark tech rout

· CNA · Join

Read a summary of this article on FAST.
Get bite-sized news via a new
cards interface. Give it a try.
Click here to return to FAST Tap here to return to FAST
FAST

SEOUL, June 8 : South Korea's stock benchmark plunged over 8 per cent on Monday, tripping circuit breakers, after robust U.S. jobs data lifted bets on a Federal Reserve rate hike and unleashed a selloff in the tech‑heavy market that had powered the broader AI rally.

The KOSPI fell 8.3 per cent to close at 7,484.41, marking its biggest daily fall since March 4. The index is now 15 per cent below the peak of 8,801.49 hit on June 2.

Chip heavyweight Samsung Electronics tumbled 10.2 per cent, and peer SK Hynix dropped 7.7 per cent even as Nvidia's CEO, Jensen Huang, said SK Hynix remained its "biggest partner" while unveiling new deals during his trip to South Korea.

The two South Korean chipmakers have been the driving force behind the index's world-beating surge, buoyed by record profits. Their market capitalisations this year alone have jumped more than 150 per cent and 200 per cent, respectively, now accounting for over half of the benchmark and propelling them into the $1 trillion club.

CNA Games

Guess Word
Crack the word, one row at a time

Buzzword
Create words using the given letters

Mini Sudoku
Tiny puzzle, mighty brain teaser

Mini Crossword
Small grid, big challenge

Word Search
Spot as many words as you can
Show More
Show Less

Circuit breakers were activated on the benchmark index soon after the market opened, halting trading for 20 minutes for the first time in three months, followed by another "sidecar" curb. It was the third time circuit breakers were triggered this year, and the ninth in history.

The won rallied more than 1 per cent to 1,533.7 per dollar, rebounding from Friday's 1,615.0 - its weakest since March 2009 - after authorities convened an emergency meeting and vowed firm action against speculative trading.

Foreign exchange officials on Monday renewed their warning, with traders suspecting authorities to be conducting dollar-selling intervention to cap the won's losses. "However, we will have to see if the 1,550 level will be defended," one trader said.

The selloff in stocks followed a torrid session on Wall Street on Friday. The Nasdaq fell 4.2 per cent after strong payrolls data killed any hopes of further interest rate cuts, while the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index slumped 10 per cent and iShares MSCI South Korea ETF plunged 14 per cent.

"A surprise in U.S. employment data triggered bond yield rises and provided an excuse for correction in an overheated market amid accumulated pressure from the surge in semiconductor stocks," said Han Ji-young, an analyst at Kiwoom Securities.

"Increased volatility is inevitable, but it is unlikely that the rout will go on for several days, given that the KOSPI's valuation pressure has been lowered by recent correction and earnings momentum remains robust for semiconductor stocks," Han said.

South Korea's benchmark 10-year treasury bond yield rose as much as 12.3 basis points to 4.366 per cent, the highest since October 2023.

In a press conference marking his first year in office on Monday, President Lee Jae Myung, who has rolled out a range of policies to boost the domestic stock market since taking office in June 2025, said the market was "still undervalued."

Lee described the current exchange rate as temporary and abnormal, pointing to foreign investors selling local stocks for portfolio rebalancing as the primary factor weighing on the won in the near term.

E-commerce firm Naver was a rare outlier among index heavyweights, rising 9.2 per cent on a deal with Nvidia, while Hyundai Motor dropped 8.7 per cent despite an agreement with the U.S. AI chipmaker to expand their partnership.

Foreigners were net sellers of local shares worth 355 billion won ($231.40 million), extending their selloff to 21 consecutive sessions.

Despite Monday's losses, the KOSPI is up 78 per cent year-to-date. In 2025, it rose 76 per cent for its biggest gain since 1999 and the top performance among major global markets last year.

($1 = 1,534.1400 won)

Source: Reuters

Newsletter

Week in Review

Subscribe to our Chief Editor’s Week in Review

Our chief editor shares analysis and picks of the week's biggest news every Saturday.

Sign up for our newsletters

Get our pick of top stories and thought-provoking articles in your inbox

Subscribe here

Get the CNA app

Stay updated with notifications for breaking news and our best stories

Download here

Get WhatsApp alerts

Join our channel for the top reads for the day on your preferred chat app

Join here