Stock Markets June 23, 2026 10:41 PM

KOSPI Climbs After Tech-Driven Rout, Samsung and SK Hynix Recover Some Losses

Chip giants rebound as market digests a near-10% drop and lingering doubts over AI exposure and leveraged ETFs

By Nina Shah
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South Korea’s benchmark KOSPI index rebounded sharply on Wednesday, recovering part of a near-10% plunge from the prior session as major chipmakers Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix regained ground. The KOSPI rose 3.4% to 8,480.21, while Samsung jumped after reports of a large share buyback and SK Hynix advanced on plans related to an ADR listing. Market stress from an MSCI classification decision, questions about the AI-driven trade and heavy selling of leveraged ETFs still underline uncertainty.

KOSPI Climbs After Tech-Driven Rout, Samsung and SK Hynix Recover Some Losses
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Key Points

  • KOSPI rose 3.4% to 8,480.21 on Wednesday, recovering from an almost 10% plunge on Tuesday; intraday highs reached 8,577.52.
  • Samsung Electronics surged between 7% and 10% after reports it is preparing a nearly 90 trillion won ($5.8 billion) share buyback.
  • SK Hynix gained 3.4% after reports it was advancing plans for an American Depository Receipts listing; both chipmakers had fallen more than 12% in the prior session.

South Korea’s KOSPI index staged a notable recovery on Wednesday, clawing back a portion of steep losses it suffered in the previous session. The index advanced 3.4% to close at 8,480.21 points, trading off intraday highs of 8,577.52 points as the market digested a heavy sell-off in technology and chipmaking stocks the day before.

Two of the nation’s largest companies, Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and SK Hynix Inc, were among the primary drivers of the rebound. Samsung moved sharply higher, gaining between 7% and 10% after a report said the company was preparing a share buyback program worth nearly 90 trillion won ($5.8 billion). SK Hynix rose 3.4% on reports that it was making progress toward listing American Depository Receipts, a step that could bring additional capital to the company.

Those gains came after an extreme bout of volatility on Tuesday, when the KOSPI plunged nearly 10% amid a major rout in chip and technology names. Both Samsung and SK Hynix had suffered deep losses in that sell-off, each down more than 12% from the prior session.


Market context and catalysts

Several negative developments compounded to amplify selling pressure on Tuesday. MSCI declined to consider South Korea for reclassification as a developed market, a decision markets treated as unfavorable. In addition, growing doubts about the sustainability of the artificial intelligence trade weighed on investor sentiment. One report said SK Hynix was planning to shift more toward traditional memory products and away from high-bandwidth memory products supplied to AI developers, which contributed to concern among momentum-driven investors.

Market losses were further magnified by heavy selling of highly leveraged exchange-traded funds. The episode prompted public commentary from the head of South Korea’s market watchdog, who said they regretted permitting the release of those ETFs last month, reflecting regulatory unease about the products' role in the volatility.


Broader market position

Despite the prior session’s dramatic declines, the KOSPI remained the best-performing major stock index year-to-date, carrying gains of nearly 100% so far this year. That performance largely reflected earlier rallies in technology and chipmaking companies tied to expectations of outsized gains from AI-related demand, which had driven investors into market leaders such as Samsung and SK Hynix.

Wednesday’s rebound reduced some pressure on those names but did not erase the underlying market uncertainties: the MSCI decision, questions about product mix and demand for AI-related memory products, and the mechanics of leveraged ETF flows all remain in play.


What this means for investors

Investors should note that the rebound was concentrated in large-cap technology and chip stocks directly tied to AI narratives and corporate actions such as buybacks and potential ADR listings. The episode highlights the market sensitivity to regulatory classification decisions, shifts in product focus among major suppliers to AI developers, and the liquidity dynamics introduced by leveraged ETF positions.

Risks

  • MSCI's decision not to consider South Korea for developed market classification remains a source of uncertainty for market positioning and investor flows; this primarily affects the broader equity market and large-cap exporters.
  • Doubts over the AI-driven trade, including reports SK Hynix may pivot toward traditional memory from high-bandwidth memory supplied to AI developers, could pressure technology and semiconductor sectors.
  • Selling of highly leveraged exchange-traded funds magnified market losses and prompted regulatory concern, creating liquidity and volatility risks for equities tied to leveraged ETF flows.

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