South Korea's stock market is sending early warning signs that Asia's AI investment frenzy may be peaking. As a key bellwether for AI-themed stocks, the KOSPI index has recently experienced sharp volatility, breaking its previous low-volatility uptrend.
The KOSPI index had moved in perfect sync with the Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF (AIQ) since May, but this upward momentum has recently reversed, with consecutive steep declines and wild swings. The index has now fallen to its 21-day moving average, while the 50-day moving average remains far below.
Technical warnings for Korea's AI boom The KOSPI's technical indicators show clear overheating signals. Weekly and monthly Relative Strength Index (RSI) levels have entered extreme territory, indicating severe overbought conditions. Since late October, the volatility curve structure has shown extreme inversion, reflecting investors' collective chase for upside exposure—a phenomenon that typically signals excessive optimism and correction risks.
"Under our bubble analysis framework, KOSPI is among the markets showing the most extreme volatility swings. This doesn't necessarily indicate an imminent reversal, but it's undoubtedly an additional warning sign of abnormal and rapid market fluctuations," cautioned analysts.
The KOSPI's movements remain highly correlated with U.S. AI stocks like NVIDIA (NVDA) and Palantir (PLTR), confirming that global AI investments have converged into a tightly linked single trade theme.
Shift in Korean investment focus Korean investors' attention shifted dramatically in September. Previously a major cryptocurrency trading hub, South Korea saw crypto trading volumes collapse as capital flooded into AI-themed stocks instead.
Upbit exchange data shows Korean crypto trading volumes shrinking sharply, while SK Hynix's stock performance began diverging noticeably from Bitcoin's trajectory in September. Google Trends data reveals Korean users' search interest in SK Hynix has surpassed Bitcoin, reflecting a fundamental shift in investor focus. Korean investors are now concentrating on AI opportunities, reallocating crypto funds to semiconductors and AI-related equities.
KOSPI's unique role as global economic barometer The intense scrutiny on South Korea's market stems from its unique position in the global economy. With over 40% of GDP derived from exports—spanning semiconductors, automobiles, batteries, and displays—it serves as a direct proxy for global supply chains and AI capital expenditure.
The Korean market exhibits high cyclical sensitivity, typically reacting first when global PMI, trade volumes, or semiconductor prices bottom out. International investors treat South Korea as a "liquid EM beta trade," making KOSPI and KOSDAQ primary targets when funds rotate back to Asia or emerging markets.
SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics' dominance in HBM and AI memory sectors positions Korea's market performance as a real-time gauge of actual AI infrastructure spending—a unique status that lends global significance to any abnormal KOSPI volatility.