Korean Stock Market Emergency Briefing: Market Volatility
The KOSPI hit the 8,000 mark for the first time ever this week, only to face a sharp reversal driven by massive foreign sell-offs and profit-taking. With foreign net selling reaching nearly 98 trillion won since the start of the year, investors are now bracing for the impact of plunging U.S. semiconductor stocks and the potential strike risk at Samsung Electronics.
Korean Stock Market Emergency Briefing — 2026-05-17
Market Snapshot
- KOSPI: 7,493.18 (as of May 15 close, down approx. −178pt / −2.29%)
- KOSDAQ: Data unconfirmed — followed the sharp decline trend on May 15
- KRW/USD Exchange Rate: 1,500.8 won (up +9.8 won from previous day) — crossed the 1,500 mark for the first time in about a month
- Market Sentiment: Sidecar triggered after breaking the 8,000 mark; closed sharply lower due to heavy foreign sell-offs, reflecting a mix of fear and profit-taking.

Supply & Demand Trends (KOSPI based)
- Foreigners: Approx. −5.6 trillion won net sell — heavy selling in Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix
- Institutions: Joined in on profit-taking with large-scale selling — sold off semiconductor leverage ETFs
- Individuals: Entered as dip buyers — net buying focused on semiconductors and large-cap stocks
Today’s Top 5 News Stories
1. Foreign net selling in KOSPI nears 98 trillion won since year-start
- What happened?: According to Koscom CHECK, foreign investors net sold a total of 98.2 trillion won in the KOSPI market from the beginning of the year through May 15. This exceeds the total foreign net selling for all of last year, marking a record high in just four months.
- Market Impact: Intensified downward pressure on the KOSPI and directly triggered KRW weakness (exchange rate breaking 1,500 won).
2. KOSPI breaks 8,000 mark for the first time, then plunges — sell-sidecar triggered
- What happened?: The KOSPI crossed 8,000 for the first time at 9:13 AM on May 15, but a sell-sidecar was triggered at 1:28 PM, halting trading for 5 minutes. It later dropped as low as 7,300 before closing at 7,493.18.
- Market Impact: Surge in inverse ETFs, collapse of semiconductor leverage ETFs, and unprecedented volatility.

3. KRW/USD exchange rate breaks 1,500 won — rises for 6 consecutive sessions
- What happened?: The KRW/USD rate closed at 1,500.8 won in the Seoul foreign exchange market on May 15, up 9.8 won from the previous session. Global dollar strength following U.S. inflation data and heavy selling by foreign investors drove the won lower.
- Market Impact: Some export companies expect benefits, but concerns over foreign capital outflow persist.
4. U.S. semiconductor stocks plunge 4% — fears of a "Black Monday" for Samsung and SK Hynix
- What happened?: Semiconductor stocks in the U.S. market fell in unison by 4%. Geopolitical instability in the Middle East and rising interest rates dampened AI investment sentiment. Experts are pointing to the possibility of a "short-term correction." Notably, Samsung Electronics faces additional pressure from a potential union strike.
- Market Impact: Added downward pressure on Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix; increased caution across the semiconductor sector.

5. Continued volatility expected ahead of Nvidia’s earnings (May 20)
- What happened?: Ahead of the Nvidia earnings announcement on May 20, issues such as H200 sales to China have emerged as key variables. Financial News forecasted that "the market will continue to see volatility as short-term overheating concerns coexist with earnings expectations."
- Market Impact: Expected wider price fluctuations for semiconductor and AI-related stocks; market direction in early trading is crucial.
Leading Sectors & Themes
Semiconductors
- Trend: The driver behind breaking the 8,000 mark, but took a sharp turn due to foreign profit-taking and the U.S. semiconductor sell-off. Semiconductor leverage ETFs plunged while inverse ETFs benefited.
- Key Stocks: Samsung Electronics (approx. −8%), SK Hynix (approx. −8% as of May 15)
Robots
- Trend: Robot-related stocks remained relatively strong in the KOSDAQ market with continued concentration of buying power.
- Key Stocks: Hurim Robot, Cosmo Robotics (fluctuation rates unconfirmed)
Inverse ETFs (Volatility Hedge)
- Trend: Inflow of funds and strength in inverse ETFs during the KOSPI plunge; leverage ETFs suffered sharp declines.
- Key Stocks: KODEX Inverse series ETFs are up, semiconductor leverage ETFs are down.

Top Movers
Top 3 Gainers
- CHA Vaccine Institute — Surge — Individual momentum on KOSDAQ attracted inflows.
- SAMT — Surge — Individual positive news and concentrated demand on KOSDAQ.
- Hurim Robot — Strong — Maintained high trading volume amid continued interest in the robot theme.
Top 3 Losers
- Samsung Electronics — Approx. −8% — Massive 5 trillion won sell-off by foreigners and union strike risks.
- SK Hynix — Approx. −8% — Cascading drop from U.S. semiconductor stocks and intense profit-taking.
- Semiconductor Leverage ETF — Plunge — Losses magnified by the KOSPI’s sharp decline.
Overseas Market Linkage
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U.S. semiconductor stock crash (-4%): Geopolitical anxiety in the Middle East and rising U.S. interest rates significantly dampened sentiment for AI and semiconductors. This acted as a direct trigger for the sharp drop in Samsung and SK Hynix.
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U.S. inflation data and dollar strength: U.S. inflation figures exceeding market expectations fueled global dollar strength, pushing the KRW/USD rate over 1,500. Resulting foreign capital outflows are increasing downward pressure on the won.
Tomorrow’s Checkpoints
- Samsung Electronics union strike: If a strike begins, it could cause production disruptions and further downward pressure on the stock. Watch for strike-related announcements early in the week.
- Pre-Nvidia earnings (May 20) trends: Check for early trading patterns in semiconductor stocks and updates regarding H200 sales to China.
- Foreign flow reversal: Monitor whether the trend of 98 trillion won in cumulative net selling slows down or reverses.
Investor Action Items
- Check foreign flows early: Observe whether foreign net selling continues or shifts to dip-buying within the first 30 minutes of the market open.
- Monitor Samsung strike news in real-time: The short-term direction of the entire semiconductor sector may depend on strike developments and negotiation results.
- Review Nvidia earnings consensus: Check the earnings guidance levels against market expectations ahead of the May 20 announcement to manage risk in large-cap semiconductor positions.
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