Illustration of concerned traders on the Seoul stock exchange floor watching KOSPI index fall sharply due to tech losses, with red graphs and city skyline in background.
Illustration of concerned traders on the Seoul stock exchange floor watching KOSPI index fall sharply due to tech losses, with red graphs and city skyline in background.
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Seoul shares open sharply lower on tech losses

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South Korean stocks started weakly on Friday, November 21, 2025, tracking overnight Wall Street losses amid renewed concerns over artificial intelligence (AI) stock valuations. The KOSPI index fell 3.42% in early trading. This came despite Nvidia's strong quarterly results.

South Korea's stock market opened weakly on the morning of Friday, November 21, 2025, amid renewed valuation concerns for artificial intelligence (AI) stocks and the aftermath of U.S. market declines. The benchmark KOSPI index fell 137.06 points, or 3.42%, to 3,867.79 in the first 15 minutes of trading.

The previous day, on November 20, the KOSPI had rebounded, adding 75.34 points or 1.92% to close at 4,004.85, driven by Nvidia's strong quarterly results. However, U.S. shares closed lower overnight, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down 0.84% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite sinking 2.15%. Nvidia shares declined despite robust earnings, as investors grew cautious about the sharp recent upturn in AI-related stocks and their aggressive investment plans, compounded by mixed jobs data that dampened expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts.

In Seoul, major tech shares led the declines. Market bellwether Samsung Electronics dipped 4.13%, and chip giant SK hynix retreated 7.88%. Leading battery maker LG Energy Solution slid 3.29%, nuclear power plant builder Doosan Enerbility sank 5.53%, and LG Chem fell 5.15%. Top automaker Hyundai Motor shed 1.34%, while its affiliate Kia edged down 0.18%. Leading shipbuilder HD Hyundai Heavy went down 3.6%, and rival Hanwha Ocean decreased 3.68%. Leading financial group KB Financial declined 0.58%, internet portal operator Naver lost 0.78%, and top steelmaker POSCO tumbled 2.8%.

The local currency was trading at 1,470.45 won against the U.S. dollar at 9:15 a.m., down 2.55 won from the previous session.

On November 20, Lee Sung-hoon, an analyst at Kiwoom Securities, said, "The KOSPI has fallen 4.3 percent so far in November, and the recent correction has eased valuation burdens." He added, "Considering that the earnings cycle of domestic listed companies is still under way, we believe the upward momentum of the local market remains intact despite the short-term volatility."

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Discussions on X focus on the sharp decline in Seoul's KOSPI index by over 4% at open, mirroring Wall Street's tech sell-off amid persistent AI valuation bubble fears, despite Nvidia's positive earnings. Sentiments are predominantly negative, with market analysts noting heavy losses in semiconductor giants like SK Hynix and Samsung, signaling broader caution in Asian tech sectors.

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Seoul stocks open sharply lower on US tech slump

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South Korean shares opened more than 3 percent lower on Wednesday, November 5, 2025, tracking an overnight slump on Wall Street driven by concerns over lofty stock valuations and an AI bubble. The benchmark KOSPI fell 135.79 points, or 3.29 percent, to 3,985.59 in the first 15 minutes of trading, retreating below the 4,000 mark. This followed a strong run, including breaching 4,200 just days earlier.

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.

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South Korean stocks traded lower late Tuesday morning, led by declines in tech shares amid weakening investor sentiment over diminished expectations for a Federal Reserve rate cut. The KOSPI index fell 1.95 percent to 4,009.65 as of 11:20 a.m. The drop followed overnight losses on Wall Street.

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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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.

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.

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South Korean stocks closed slightly lower Friday amid mixed US signals on its war with Iran and eased chip sector concerns. The benchmark KOSPI fell 0.4 percent to 5,438.87, while the won weakened against the dollar.

 

 

 

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