한국 증시 Emergency Update — 2026-05-27
The KOSPI index soared, breaking the 8,450 mark during intraday trading thanks to record-breaking rallies in chip giants Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix. However, the KOSDAQ plummeted over 3%, highlighting a extreme divergence in the market. While institutional buying is propping up the KOSPI despite a persistent foreign sell-off, the KRW/USD exchange rate remains stubbornly high in the mid-1,500s.
Korean Stock Market Emergency Briefing — 2026-05-27
Market Snapshot
- KOSPI: 8,047.51 (+2.55% from previous close as of 5/26)
- KOSDAQ: 1,133.18 (-3.36% as of afternoon session on 5/27)
- KRW/USD Exchange Rate: Continues in the mid-1,500s (weak won cemented by 13 consecutive days of foreign net selling)
- Market Sentiment: Funds are heavily concentrated in large-cap semiconductor stocks, with daily KOSPI trading volume nearing 50 trillion won and extreme polarization between KOSPI and KOSDAQ.

Supply & Demand Trends (KOSPI)
- Foreigners: 13 consecutive days of net selling. They offloaded over 10 trillion won in Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix last week alone, though they are buying into robotics and ESS (Energy Storage System) stocks.
- Institutions: Net buyers. They are the primary force driving the KOSPI past 8,000, focusing mainly on large-cap semiconductors.
- Retail Investors: Aggressive buying of 54 trillion won year-to-date, including 25 trillion won in Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix this month alone, helping to cushion the index.

Top 5 Key News
1. KOSPI surpasses 8,450 intraday, driven by semiconductor "big two"
- What's happening?: On the 27th, the KOSPI broke 8,450 during intraday trading as semiconductors like Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix hit all-time highs. Expectations for a "super cycle" are peaking, with SK Hynix nearing the 2 million won mark. Daily trading volume is nearing 50 trillion won, with half of the market’s liquidity locked in these semiconductor giants.
- Market Impact: Semiconductor sector gains; small-to-mid caps on KOSDAQ face downward pressure.

2. Foreigners set record with 13-day net selling streak — 46 trillion won outflow
- What's happening?: Foreign investors have net-sold for a record 13 consecutive days. During this period, outflows exceeded 46 trillion won, with over 10 trillion won pulled from Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix last week. However, they remain net buyers on the KOSDAQ, shifting funds toward growth stocks like robotics, AI infrastructure, and ESS.
- Market Impact: Won weakness (1,500s rate), capping upside for major chipmakers; relative strength in robot/ESS themes.

3. Retail investors ("Donghak Ants") anchor the market with 54 trillion won buying
- What's happening?: While foreigners have sold 96 trillion won year-to-date, retail investors have bought 54 trillion won, supporting the KOSPI. 25 trillion won flowed into the two chip giants this month, and ETF inflows have heavily favored semiconductors, totaling 51 trillion won for the year.
- Market Impact: Providing a price floor for major chip stocks and acting as the core driver for the KOSPI rally.

4. KRW/USD exchange rate sticks to 1,500s despite peace hopes
- What's happening?: Despite hopes for an end to the US-Iran conflict, the exchange rate remains stuck in the 1,500s. Foreign outflows are sustaining the weak won. According to the Seoul Economic Daily, the real effective exchange rate of the won (BIS standard) has hit its lowest level since March 2009.
- Market Impact: Benefit to exporters vs. pressure from rising import costs; concerns over further foreign selling.

5. K-Bio sector signals potential turnaround
- What's happening?: Long overshadowed by semiconductors, the biotech sector is showing signs of life. Hopes for technology exports from companies like HanAll Biopharma and Alteogen, along with policy fund inflows (National Growth Fund), are acting as catalysts. Biotech’s direction is key to a KOSDAQ recovery.
- Market Impact: Potential rebound for biotech stocks and influence on KOSDAQ recovery.

Key Sectors & Themes
Semiconductors (Dominating KOSPI)
- Trend: Record highs for Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix lead the market. However, Wall Street is beginning to warn of a potential "end to the semiconductor super cycle."
- Key Stocks: Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix (nearing 2M won).
Robotics, AI Infrastructure, ESS (Targeted by Foreigners)
- Trend: A clear shift in foreign interest away from the "big two" into these growth themes.
- Key Stocks: Robotics, AI infra, and ESS-related growth stocks on KOSDAQ.
Biotech (KOSDAQ recovery variable)
- Trend: Attempting a rebound on export expectations, though the market dip on the 27th has kept performance muted.
- Key Stocks: HanAll Biopharma, Alteogen.
Top Movers
Top 3 Gainers
- SK Hynix: Nearing all-time high on super-cycle expectations.
- Samsung Electronics: Supported by AI/HBM demand and massive retail buying.
- EcoPro BM: Showing strength in KOSDAQ alongside institutional/foreign interest.
Top 3 Losers
- KOSDAQ Biotech large-caps: Down 3% as capital migrates to chips.
- EcoPro: Weighed down by overall weak sentiment toward KOSDAQ growth stocks.
- KOSDAQ small-to-mid growth stocks: Falling as funds flow into KOSPI giants.
Global Market Context
1. US-Iran peace talks: Impact on exchange rates
Hopes for peace fueled global risk appetite, lifting European markets and Japan’s Nikkei 225 (hitting 65,000 for the first time). However, the won remained weak, preventing a full risk-on shift in Korea.
2. Wall Street warns of "End to Semiconductor Super Cycle"
Warnings of a classic supply-demand cycle (over-supply leading to price drops) have emerged, fueling concerns about volatility in the Korean market.
Tomorrow's Watchlist
- Foreign Fund Flow: Will the 14-day sell-off continue or reverse?
- SK Hynix: Will it break the psychological 2 million won barrier?
- KOSDAQ Bottom: Can it find support after the 3% drop?
Action Items
- Monitor Morning Foreign Flow: Check for early-morning buying between 9:00 and 9:30 AM as a signal for the KOSPI.
- Strategic Rebalancing: Instead of chasing semiconductor highs, evaluate the technical rebound potential of oversold KOSDAQ sectors like biotech and robotics.
- FX Risk Management: Given the KRW is at 2009-level lows, reassess FX-sensitive holdings (airlines, energy, importers).
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