Foreign ownership of Korean stocks reaches highest in nearly 6 years

Foreign ownership of South Korean stocks hit 37.18% of total market capitalization in January, the highest in nearly six years. This surge was driven by net purchases in the shipbuilding, defense, and nuclear power sectors. Data from the Korea Exchange shows it as the peak since April 2020.

According to the Korea Exchange (KRX), foreigners' stock holdings rose to 37.18% of total market capitalization on January 7, marking the highest level since April 9, 2020, when it stood at 37.34%. The uptick began with offshore investors buying shares in the semiconductor sector during the second half of last year and extended to shipbuilding, defense, and nuclear power sectors this month.

In the second half of last year alone, foreign investors net purchased 14.1 trillion won ($9.7 billion) worth of Samsung Electronics shares. This month, the most sought-after stocks were Hanwha Ocean, Doosan Enerbility, and Naver, in that order.

Investments in shipbuilding and nuclear power were fueled by expectations of large-scale orders amid rising global demand. Those in the defense sector appear to have been boosted by tensions arising from U.S. President Donald Trump's threat to acquire Greenland.

This trend in foreign buying highlights the appeal of Korean stocks and reflects investor sentiment tied to global economic developments.

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Seoul's stock market set a new record high on January 8 driven by strong defense and shipbuilding stocks, then dipped early on January 9 before rebounding later in the morning. The KOSPI index closed at 4,552.37 on the 8th, its all-time high, and rose 0.3 percent to 4,565.88 by 11:20 a.m. on the 9th. Institutional and individual buying offset foreign selling to support the market.

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.

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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.

South Korean stocks closed higher for the second straight session as investors hunted bargains amid volatility from the U.S.-Iran war. The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) rose 77.36 points, or 1.4 percent, to 5,609.95. The Korean won strengthened 2.7 won against the U.S. dollar to 1,466.5.

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South Korean stocks extended their rally on Tuesday, December 23, 2025, after Monday's 2.12 percent close at 4,105.93. The KOSPI rose 0.58 percent to 4,195.78 by 11:20 a.m., boosted by sustained US tech gains and President Trump's naval warship plan with Hanwha.

South Korean stocks surged over 4% on February 3, rebounding from the previous day's drop and triggering a buy-side circuit breaker. The Korea Exchange halted trading for five minutes at 9:26 a.m., the first such activation since last year. Institutional and foreign investors bought up heavyweight shares amid bargain hunting.

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South Korean stocks surged more than 2% on Friday to close at an all-time high, led by strong gains in large-cap semiconductor shares. The benchmark KOSPI index rose 2.27% to 4,309.63, crossing the 4,300 level for the first time. The local currency weakened slightly against the U.S. dollar.

 

 

 

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