KOSPI index opens sharply higher at Korea Exchange, traders celebrate US AI tech rally gains.
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KOSPI opens sharply higher on US AI tech rally

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Building on Friday's close, Seoul's KOSPI opened sharply higher on Monday, tracking Wall Street's AI-driven gains that eased bubble concerns. The index rose 1.69 percent to 4,088.56 early, advancing to 1.75 percent (4,090.91) by 11:20 a.m.

On December 22, 2025, the benchmark KOSPI added 68.01 points, or 1.69 percent, to 4,088.56 in the first 15 minutes of trading, further gaining 70.36 points, or 1.75 percent, to 4,090.91 by 11:20 a.m. This continued the rally from the December 19 close at 4,020.55.

The surge mirrored Friday's strong US performance despite AI valuation worries: Dow Jones +0.38 percent, Nasdaq +1.31 percent, S&P 500 +0.88 percent. Nvidia climbed 3.93 percent on reports of US review for H200 AI chip sales to China, AMD soared 6.15 percent, and Oracle rose 6.63 percent.

Seoul tech stocks led: Samsung Electronics +3.1 to 3.29 percent, SK hynix +4.39 to 5.48 percent, SK Square +3.96 to 6.02 percent, LG Energy Solution +1.85 to 2.77 percent. Doosan Enerbility +1.68 to 1.55 percent, Hanwha Aerospace +1.92 to 1.24 percent.

Automakers were mixed: Hyundai Motor recovered to +0.17 percent, Kia to -0.25 percent. Shipbuilders split, with Hanwha Ocean to +0.46 percent and HD Korea Shipbuilding to -1.19 percent.

The won traded slightly weaker at 1,477.4-1,477.7 per dollar, down 1.1-1.4 won.

What people are saying

X discussions highlight KOSPI opening sharply higher, up 1.7-2%, primarily driven by semiconductor gains tracking US AI tech rally. Korean traders note heavy retail selling offset by foreign and institutional buying, leading to somewhat subdued momentum. Optimism persists with observations of foreigners positioning for upside and Santa rally expectations.

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Seoul shares dip on tech losses in morning trading

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South Korean stocks fell in Wednesday morning trading, led by declines in technology shares amid fears of an AI bubble and waning expectations for a US Federal Reserve rate cut. The KOSPI index was down 0.16 percent at 3,947.25 as of 11:20 a.m. It had dropped more sharply at the open but recovered somewhat.

Seoul shares closed higher Friday as investors regained confidence in the artificial intelligence sector, boosted by slower-than-expected U.S. inflation data. The local currency also strengthened slightly against the dollar.

Reported by AI

Seoul shares closed higher on Friday, ending a three-day decline, as robust earnings from U.S. chipmaker Broadcom eased concerns over an artificial intelligence bubble. The benchmark KOSPI gained 1.38 percent to 4,167.16. The local currency fell slightly against the U.S. dollar.

South Korean stocks rose Tuesday on revived hopes for a US Federal Reserve rate cut and eased concerns over AI valuations. The KOSPI index surged at open but moderated to a 0.96% gain by late morning. Tech and defense shares led the advances.

Reported by AI

South Korea's KOSPI index briefly surpassed the 5,000-point mark for the first time on January 22, and continued rising on January 23 morning before trimming gains due to profit-taking. As of 11:20 a.m., the index stood at 4,978.65, up 0.53%, amid mixed performances in tech and auto shares. Optimism over U.S. market gains and AI demand supported the rally.

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.

Reported by AI

Building on January 2's 1.1% gain to 4,260.55, South Korean stocks extended their rally on January 5, propelled by semiconductors and tech shares. The KOSPI surged 2.6% to 4,421.63 as of 11:20 a.m.—crossing 4,400 for the first time—with foreigners net buying heavily despite mixed Wall Street cues.

 

 

 

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