Trading floor at Korea Exchange in Seoul shows KOSPI index falling 1.12% to 3,987.46 amid chipmaker declines, worried investors react.
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Seoul shares extend losses on chip declines Thursday morning

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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.

Seoul's stock market opened lower on Thursday despite gains on Wall Street. The benchmark KOSPI lost 0.72 percent to 4,007.06 in the first 15 minutes of trading and further declined 1.12 percent to 3,987.46 by 11:20 a.m., driven by foreign selling of major chipmakers. Samsung Electronics fell 1.05 percent, while SK hynix dropped 3.26 percent.

In contrast, automakers gained ground, with Hyundai Motor surging 5.63 percent and Kia rising 0.93 percent. LG Energy Solution decreased 1.91 percent, and Hanwha Aerospace dipped 2.19 percent. The local currency traded at 1,471.3 won per U.S. dollar as of 11:15 a.m., up 3.3 won from the prior session.

The previous day, on December 3, the KOSPI rose 1.04 percent to close at 4,036.3, boosted by a revised third-quarter GDP growth of 1.3 percent—the fastest in nearly four years. It marked the first close above 4,000 since November 20. Daishin Securities analyst Lee Kyoung-min said, "Amid tariff issues and global uncertainties, the South Korean economy has shown signs of recovery, prompting stronger demand for risky assets."

Meanwhile, the KOSDAQ market's capitalization surpassed 500 trillion won for the first time intraday, fueled by expectations of government market-boosting measures. The market's volatility may persist amid global trade tensions and domestic economic indicators.

What people are saying

Discussions on X focus on KOSPI's 1%+ decline in morning trade due to foreign investors offloading chipmakers like Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix amid AI stock overvaluation concerns and won strengthening. Traders highlight heavy short selling and net selling by foreigners totaling over 6 trillion won, with retail buying the dip. Some view the drop to around 3,997 as a potential bottom after testing key supports.

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