Foreign holdings of Korean stocks nearly double in 2025

The value of South Korean stocks held by foreign investors nearly doubled in 2025 compared to the previous year. This surge was driven by an unprecedented stock rally led by semiconductors, with U.S. investors holding the largest share.

As of the end of December 2025, foreign investors held South Korean stocks worth a total of 1,326.8 trillion won ($918.3 billion), marking a 96.9 percent increase from 673.7 trillion won at the end of 2024, according to data from the Financial Securities Service (FSS). This rise was largely due to a sharp increase in the value of local shares, with the country's total market capitalization surging more than 77 percent to 3,478 trillion won from 1,963 trillion won over the year. The rally was led by semiconductors.

Despite netting sales of 9.2 trillion won in local shares during 2025, the value of holdings grew significantly. By country, U.S. investors held the largest portion at 546 trillion won, more than doubling from 272 trillion won a year earlier. Investors from Britain and Singapore followed with 144 trillion won and 88 trillion won, respectively.

British investors were the most active traders, with transactions totaling 1,031 trillion won over the period, accounting for 46.2 percent of all offshore trades in South Korea. This data highlights the international appeal of the Korean stock market amid the ongoing rally.

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Illustration of jubilant traders at Seoul's stock exchange celebrating a tech chip rally and surging Korean won.
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Seoul stocks end higher on chip rally as won surges

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South Korean stocks closed higher on December 26, driven by gains in major tech shares like Samsung Electronics and SK hynix. The won strengthened sharply to 1,440.3 against the dollar, up 9.5 won, following the National Pension Service's resumption of foreign exchange hedging and authorities' intervention. This marked a rebound from near 16-year lows.

South Koreans' overseas stock investments nearly tripled from a year earlier to an all-time high in 2025, reaching a level comparable to the country's annual current account surplus, central bank data showed on February 18. The surge has been cited as a key factor behind the weakness of the Korean won.

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Foreign ownership in the South Korean stock market reached its highest level in five years and eight months in December. Investors bought a net 3.5 trillion won worth of shares, raising their holdings to 32.9% of total market capitalization. This surge stems from strong global demand for memory chips and government reforms.

The number of South Korean companies with a market capitalization exceeding 1 trillion won ($692.1 million) jumped 13 percent in less than two months since the start of the year, driven by a continued stock rally. As of Friday, 365 companies listed on the local stock market met this threshold, up 42 from the end of last year. This surge is attributed to strong gains in the KOSPI and KOSDAQ indices.

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South Korean stocks traded higher on the first trading day of 2026, led by sharp gains in large-cap semiconductor shares. The benchmark KOSPI index rose 1.1% to 4,260.55 as of 11:20 a.m. Retail investors' solid buying drove the extension of gains after an initial higher open.

Seoul-Aktien öffneten am Dienstag höher inmitten Hoffnungen auf das Ende des US-Regierungs-Shutdowns und Dividendenssteuerreformen. Der KOSPI-Index stieg um 2,19 Prozent auf 4.162,30 im frühen Handel. Dies folgt auf einen Anstieg von mehr als 3 Prozent am Montag.

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Seoul shares extended losses late Thursday morning as foreign investors offloaded major chipmakers. The KOSPI fell 1.12 percent to 3,987.46 as of 11:20 a.m. This came after a gain the previous day driven by positive third-quarter GDP data.

 

 

 

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