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Wednesday Jun 24 2026 06:43
5 min

The KOSPI Composite Index recently retreated from its multi-year highs after a sharp correction in technology stocks, briefly falling into its steepest daily decline in months before stabilising.
Despite the rebound, the index remains vulnerable to earnings-driven volatility, particularly from the semiconductor sector, which dominates its weight composition.

source: tradingview
The latest pullback reflects a broader reassessment of risk following uneven reactions to major US tech earnings, where strong results were followed by sharp post-report sell-offs.
Market attention has shifted to Micron Technology (MU), which is widely seen as a bellwether for global memory-chip demand.
The concern is not only about earnings strength but also forward guidance. Investors are increasingly sensitive to any hint that demand in high-bandwidth memory (HBM) or DRAM could be normalising after a prolonged AI-driven boom.
Recent market behaviour has amplified caution. Even companies delivering strong results have seen sell-offs if forward outlooks failed to exceed elevated expectations, reinforcing the idea that sentiment—not fundamentals alone—is driving near-term price action.
From a technical perspective, the KOSPI Composite Index shows classic signs of momentum deterioration.
The index has formed a potential double-top structure, while the Relative Strength Index (RSI) is trending lower despite price stability near recent highs. This bearish divergence suggests weakening buying pressure beneath the surface.
In addition, momentum indicators such as the Percentage Price Oscillator (PPO) are showing a downward crossover, reinforcing the idea that upside momentum is fading.
If downside pressure continues, traders are watching the psychologically important 7,000 level as a potential support zone in the near term.
Beyond technicals, fundamental concerns are also emerging within the semiconductor supply chain.
Reports of capacity shifts within key memory producers such as SK Hynix have raised questions about whether demand strength in premium AI memory chips is beginning to normalise. While not yet conclusive, such adjustments often signal a transition phase in cyclical semiconductor markets.

At the same time, foreign investor activity has leaned toward net selling, suggesting profit-taking after an extended rally rather than a full exit from the sector.
The broader concern is that any disappointment from Micron Technology (MU) could amplify existing fragility across the entire AI-memory trade.
The iShares MSCI South Korea ETF (EWY) has also come under pressure as investors rotate out of high-beta Asia tech exposure.
ETF positioning often reflects broader institutional sentiment, and recent outflows suggest that some investors are locking in gains after the strong AI-driven rally in Korean equities.
However, this does not yet indicate a structural reversal. Instead, it reflects a market increasingly driven by event risk—particularly earnings catalysts from US semiconductor leaders.
The KOSPI Composite Index is at a critical inflection point, where strong longer-term AI-driven fundamentals are being challenged by short-term technical deterioration and earnings sensitivity.
While the structural uptrend linked to semiconductor demand remains intact, near-term volatility is likely to persist. The outcome of Micron Technology (MU) earnings will be a key determinant of whether the current pullback stabilises or deepens into a broader correction.
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