South Korea’s benchmark KOSPI index fell as much as 9% intraday on June 8, triggering circuit breakers and halting trading. The culprits: Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, the same two chipmakers that had powered nearly all of the index’s gains this year.
Samsung Electronics dropped over 10% on the day, while SK Hynix declined by roughly 7-8% at various points during the session. The KOSPI ultimately closed down approximately 8.3%, landing at levels that wiped out weeks of accumulated gains in a single trading day.
A two-stock index meets gravity
Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix together accounted for up to 70% of the KOSPI’s gains during 2026. Both companies had briefly touched market valuations near $1 trillion, fueled by insatiable global demand for AI memory chips.
The sell-off didn’t materialize out of nowhere. It started building on June 5, when the KOSPI closed at 8,160.59, already down 5.5% after falling as much as 6.9% during the session. Foreign investors net-sold shares worth 3.5 trillion won that day alone, roughly $2.5 billion worth of Korean equities heading for the exits.
By June 8, the situation had escalated into something closer to a rout. The intraday 9% drop was severe enough to activate the exchange’s circuit breaker mechanism, a forced pause designed to let markets catch their breath before panic selling feeds on itself.
What lit the fuse
Two catalysts converged to create the perfect conditions for a sell-off of this magnitude.
First, US chipmaker Broadcom reported disappointing earnings. In a market where AI-related valuations had been stretched to their limits, any crack in the narrative was going to draw blood. Broadcom’s miss gave investors a reason to question whether the AI spending cycle was decelerating, and those doubts rippled across the Pacific in a matter of hours.
Second, unexpectedly strong US jobs data landed at precisely the wrong moment. Robust employment numbers in the US signal something investors dread: the Federal Reserve may need to raise interest rates rather than cut them. Higher rates make risky assets less attractive, and few assets had been riskier or more richly valued than AI semiconductor stocks.
The combination proved toxic. Foreign investors, who had been key buyers during the KOSPI’s rally earlier in 2026, reversed course aggressively. The continuous foreign outflows amplified volatility and turned what might have been an orderly correction into something far more dramatic.
What this means for investors
The broader concern is what the sell-off signals about AI valuations globally. Samsung and SK Hynix aren’t speculative startups. They are the companies that physically manufacture the memory chips powering every major AI system on the planet. If the market is telling us that even these picks-and-shovels plays were overvalued, that has implications for every AI-adjacent asset, from Nvidia to AI-focused crypto tokens and decentralized computing projects.
There’s also the interest rate angle to consider. If strong US economic data continues to push the Federal Reserve toward a hawkish stance, the repricing won’t be limited to Korean chipmakers. Risk assets across the board, including Bitcoin and the broader crypto market, tend to struggle when rate hike expectations rise.
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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