South Korea let retail investors play with leveraged single-stock ETFs. It took about a month for things to go sideways.
Two sets of 2x leveraged ETFs tracking Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix sold roughly $6 billion worth of shares in a single session on June 23, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. The selling was mechanical, triggered by the ETFs’ need to reset their leverage ratios after both stocks dropped nearly 13% during the day.
Here’s the thing about leveraged ETFs: they promise double the daily return of an underlying asset. When that asset drops hard, the fund has to sell shares at the end of the day to bring its exposure back in line. It’s not a choice. It’s math. And when the underlying stocks are two of the most heavily traded names on the Korean exchange, the math gets very expensive very fast.
How a rebalancing mechanism became a market event
The $6 billion in combined sales represented about 14% of total trading volume in Samsung and SK Hynix that day. In English: for every seven dollars changing hands in those two stocks, one dollar was being sold by a leveraged ETF resetting its books.
That kind of concentrated selling contributed to a steep decline in the broader KOSPI index, turning what might have been a bad day for semiconductors into a structurally painful one for the entire Korean market.
The products in question are single-stock 2x and inverse 2x (-2x) ETFs that launched in May 2026. South Korea’s Financial Services Commission greenlit these instruments as part of a broader push to attract retail investors, colloquially known as “ant” investors in Korean markets, to more sophisticated trading products.
The amplification problem
Leveraged ETFs have a well-documented structural quirk that Bloomberg Intelligence has flagged repeatedly. Daily rebalancing creates mechanical buying and selling pressure that amplifies moves in the underlying asset. When a stock goes up, the fund buys more. When it drops, the fund sells. This is by design.
Korean regulators appear to have recognized this quickly. Authorities are now reviewing measures to curb risks from these products, with some warnings citing the potential for extreme daily losses of up to 60% in certain scenarios. That’s not a typo. A 2x leveraged ETF on a stock that drops 30% in a day would theoretically lose 60% of its value.
The brokerage industry, meanwhile, has been doing well from the products. Estimated commissions from these ETFs could range between $3 billion and $6.4 billion, which gives you a sense of just how much trading activity they’ve generated in a very short period of time.
What this means for investors
The Samsung and SK Hynix selloff is a textbook case study in why leveraged ETFs are designed for day trading, not portfolio construction. These products reset daily. Over time, the compounding effect of that daily reset erodes returns in volatile markets, a phenomenon known as volatility decay. An investor holding a 2x ETF through a choppy period can lose money even if the underlying stock ends up roughly flat.
Any structural market mechanism that can dump $6 billion of Samsung and SK Hynix shares in a single session introduces a layer of systemic risk that didn’t exist before May 2026.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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