Illustration of KOSPI stock market high amid semiconductor gains and US-Iran concerns
Illustration of KOSPI stock market high amid semiconductor gains and US-Iran concerns
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Kospi opens at fresh high on chip rally amid us-iran woes

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South Korean stocks opened at a fresh record high on Monday, boosted by semiconductor gains even as concerns mounted over a potential breakdown in the US-Iran peace deal.

The benchmark Kospi index opened at 7,775.31, up 277.31 points or 3.7 percent, and briefly topped 7,800 before settling at 7,763.27 by 9:15 a.m., a gain of 3.54 percent.

Samsung Electronics rose 5.21 percent and SK hynix jumped 8.54 percent, tracking Friday's Wall Street rally where Micron gained 15.49 percent and AMD advanced 11.44 percent.

The Korea Exchange triggered a five-minute buy-side sidecar halt at 9:29 a.m. after Kospi 200 futures rose more than 5 percent. The won traded at 1,467.9 per dollar, up 3.8 won from the previous session.

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Initial reactions on X highlight KOSPI's record high driven by semiconductor gains amid US-Iran tensions, with notes on mixed Asian markets and broader bullish momentum in tech exports.

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Photorealistic view of Seoul stock exchange traders celebrating record highs amid US-Iran peace hopes and chipmaker gains.
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Seoul shares open at fresh high on us-iran peace hopes

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South Korean stocks opened at a fresh record high on Thursday, driven by hopes for a US-Iran peace deal and continued gains in chipmakers.

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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Seoul stocks opened Thursday at a fresh high above 6,700, driven by solid chip demand expectations following strong first-quarter earnings from Samsung Electronics and U.S. big tech firms. The benchmark KOSPI rose as high as 6,739.39 at the opening bell before adding 19.51 points, or 0.29%, to 6,710.41 as of 9:15 a.m. The index had closed at a new peak of 6,690.90 the previous day, marking three straight days of gains.

South Korean stocks opened sharply higher Tuesday amid revived hopes for US-Iran peace talks after a US naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. The benchmark KOSPI surged 2.61% to 5,960 at open, while the won strengthened to 1,478.8 per dollar, up 10.5 won.

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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.

South Korean stocks pared early losses to close nearly unchanged on Friday amid the ongoing Middle East crisis stemming from the Iran conflict. The KOSPI index ended at 5,584.87, up 0.02 percent, while the won weakened against the U.S. dollar. Autos and defense shares led the gains.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Seoul shares closed higher by 1.4 percent on optimism over upcoming U.S.-Iran ceasefire negotiations following a two-week Middle East truce. The KOSPI ended at 5,858.87, extending weekly gains to nearly 9 percent despite lingering geopolitical concerns. Investor sentiment improved amid positive regional developments.

 

 

 

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