Korea Exchange trading floor during KOSPI 4% surge, buy-side circuit breaker halt at 9:26 a.m., excited traders amid rebound rally.
Korea Exchange trading floor during KOSPI 4% surge, buy-side circuit breaker halt at 9:26 a.m., excited traders amid rebound rally.
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KOSPI surges trigger buy-side circuit breaker

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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.

On February 3, Seoul's stock market saw the KOSPI index rebound sharply from a 5.26% plunge the previous day, activating a buy-side circuit breaker. The Korea Exchange (KRX) implemented the "sidecar" measure at 9:26 a.m. after KOSPI 200 futures rose over 5%, halting trading for five minutes—the first such event since April 10 last year.

The KOSPI opened at 5,114.81, up 3.34%, and reached 5,121.72 (a 3.48% gain) in the first 15 minutes. By 11:20 a.m., it stood at 5,181.41, adding 231.74 points or 4.68%. Monday's close at 4,949.67 was attributed to profit-taking amid the U.S. Federal Reserve chair nomination and falling gold prices.

Financial authorities described the prior drop as short-term profit-taking, stating that "the real economy and financial market conditions remain solid." January exports surged at the fastest pace in 56 months, and consumer sentiment stayed above baseline for nine straight months. Positive U.S. ISM manufacturing PMI data for January, showing growth after a year, bolstered sentiment, while President Trump's nomination of hawkish Kevin Warsh as Fed chair drove down gold and silver prices.

Most large-cap shares advanced: Samsung Electronics rose 5.52% to 6.58%, SK hynix jumped 6.02% to 7.83%, Hyundai Motor added 1.57%, Hanwha Aerospace gained 3.95% to 4.6%, and KB Financial climbed 2.92% to 3.22%. The Korean won traded at 1,448.8 against the U.S. dollar, strengthening by 14.3 to 15.5 won from the prior session.

Investors are monitoring the Fed's policy shifts and escalating trade tensions. The KRX had triggered a sell-side breaker the day before, highlighting increased market volatility.

Was die Leute sagen

X discussions react to the KOSPI's over 4% surge on February 3, 2026, triggering a rare buy-side circuit breaker after the previous day's plunge. Sentiments include bullish technical outlooks on continued upside, caution labeling it a potential dead cat bounce, skepticism with foreigners buying puts amid the rally suggesting sell opportunities for large caps, and amazement at the market's extreme volatility swinging from hell to heaven in two days.

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Illustration of South Korean stock market plunge with falling KOSPI index and panicked traders.
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South Korean stocks plunge nearly 10 percent on tech sell-off

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The benchmark KOSPI index fell 9.99 percent to close at 8,203.84 on June 23 after foreign investors sold major semiconductor shares amid U.S. tech losses. The Korea Exchange activated a circuit breaker to halt trading for 20 minutes.

South Korea's benchmark KOSPI index tumbled more than 5 percent on July 2 after heavy selling in semiconductor shares, prompting the Korea Exchange to activate a sell-side sidecar.

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South Korea's bourse operator activated a buy-side sidecar for the KOSPI on Monday after the index spiked on news of a U.S.-Iran peace deal.

South Korean stocks ended a three-day winning streak on April 17 due to profit-taking, as investors awaited developments on a possible second round of U.S.-Iran peace talks. The benchmark KOSPI fell 0.55% to 6,191.92, while the won weakened to 1,483.5 against the dollar. This came amid positive signals from U.S. President Donald Trump on weekend negotiations.

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South Korean stocks opened at a record high Thursday, with the KOSPI benchmark nearing 6,500 points, driven by large-cap tech gains and the United States' indefinite extension of its ceasefire with Iran. U.S. President Donald Trump announced the decision following stalled peace talks. The index marked new records for the third consecutive session.

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