South Korea's retail investors are pouring into artificial intelligence chip stocks at an unprecedented scale, pushing the nation's $4.7 trillion market to historic highs and, simultaneously, towards a precarious edge.
Over the past 12 months, the benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index (Kospi) has surged nearly 200%, driven primarily by a fervent demand for AI-related semiconductor shares. However, this week, sentiment reversed sharply as doubts emerged about the global AI infrastructure buildout, leading the Kospi to a weekly decline of 10% and reigniting alarms about a potential AI bubble.
At the heart of this volatility are approximately 14 million Korean retail investors, often called the "ant" army. Their collective bet on the two tech giants, Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and SK Hynix Inc, is leveraging their massive combined market power to profoundly reshape the trading dynamics of the Korean stock market.
The 14 Million 'Ants': Borrowing to Chase Returns
Reports indicate that due to their sheer numbers and formidable collective influence, Korean retail investors have long been dubbed the "ant" army. Recently, this force has been heavily buying into Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and SK Hynix Inc, becoming a primary driver behind the Kospi's repeated record highs.
The story behind this retail frenzy reveals many individuals are choosing to borrow money to enter the market, aiming for outsized gains. The widespread use of leveraged trading tools has made single-stock leveraged ETF products a particular focus.
The recent market downturn has fully exposed the risks of such products, leading the country's top financial regulator to publicly acknowledge that the risks of allowing single-stock leveraged products to exist cannot be ignored.
A Highly Concentrated Market Structure: Dual Vulnerabilities
A deeper underlying risk for the Korean stock market lies in its extreme dependence on just a handful of AI chip stocks. Within the $4.7 trillion total market, Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and SK Hynix Inc command an overwhelming weight, making the entire market acutely sensitive to shifts in the AI spending cycle.
This week's market turbulence laid this structural risk bare. The moment the outlook for the global AI construction boom showed signs of wavering, market sentiment rapidly reversed, causing the Kospi's sharp weekly drop. South Korea's position at a core node of the global tech supply chain means that any substantive contraction in AI spending would be transmitted here first and most severely.
The Bubble Debate: Korea as a Potential Warning Signal
As investors continue to debate whether the AI boom represents a sustainable industrial revolution or a speculative bubble, the trajectory of the Korean market is increasingly viewed as a highly instructive case study.
When vast amounts of capital chase the same trade in a highly concentrated manner, market fragility grows. Analysis suggests that if AI chip demand ultimately slows or halts abruptly, South Korea could become a textbook example of how markets strain and potentially buckle when too much money floods in one direction. For global investors, this frenzy, driven by 14 million "ants," serves as both a microcosm of opportunity and a preview of risk.
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