KOSPI Tumbles Amidst AI Spending Doubts and Fed Fears

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AuthorVihaan Mehta|Published at:
KOSPI Tumbles Amidst AI Spending Doubts and Fed Fears
Overview

The South Korean benchmark KOSPI index experienced a sharp 5.5% decline, its steepest single-day fall since November 21. Heavyweight technology stocks, including Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, registered losses exceeding 4%. This sell-off was triggered by concerns over the sustainability of AI-driven spending, amplified by remarks from Nvidia's CEO, and further exacerbated by uncertainty surrounding the nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next US Federal Reserve Chair. The broader Asian market also felt the pressure, with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index down 1.7%.

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The market's sharp retreat was precipitated by a confluence of factors that eroded investor confidence. Doubts surrounding the longevity and scale of artificial intelligence investment, coupled with ambiguity over future US monetary policy, led to a broad-based sell-off, particularly impacting the technology sector that had previously driven significant gains.

The AI Spending Quandary

Investor sentiment soured significantly following statements from Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, who clarified that a widely reported $100 billion investment in OpenAI was "never a commitment." This remark cast doubt on the perceived certainty and future pace of capital expenditures in the burgeoning artificial intelligence sector. Analysts noted that such comments could trigger profit-taking in AI-linked stocks, many of which had experienced substantial rallies earlier in the year. The $2.52 trillion global AI spending forecast for 2026, driven by infrastructure and server demand, now faces greater scrutiny regarding its near-term realization.

Fed Uncertainty Rocks Markets

Adding another layer of apprehension was the nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next US Federal Reserve Chair. While Warsh has ties to President Trump and Wall Street connections, critical questions persist regarding his approach to interest rate policy. Analysts anticipate that Warsh may favor lower interest rates, yet the extent and speed of any such cuts, and his potential policy shifts at the Fed, remain subjects of speculation. This ambiguity contributed to heightened market volatility, echoing historical reactions in Asian markets to US monetary policy uncertainty, which have previously led to cautious sentiment and regional downturns. Concerns over US trade tariffs also add to the headwinds.

Semiconductor Sector Under Scrutiny

The sharp decline in the KOSPI was spearheaded by its most prominent constituents, Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix. Samsung Electronics, a global leader in semiconductors and consumer electronics, currently shows a P/E ratio around 24.33, with a market capitalization exceeding KRW 889 trillion. SK Hynix, a dominant force in memory chips, has a trailing twelve-month P/E ratio of approximately 15.9x, having recently surpassed TSMC in Q4 profit margin. Despite strong recent export performance in semiconductors, which accounted for over 30% of South Korea's total exports in January 2026 and drove a record high for monthly exports, the sector's heavy weighting in the KOSPI (nearly 40%) amplifies its sensitivity to any slowdown. Competitors like Nvidia, meanwhile, trade at significantly higher P/E multiples, around 47x, reflecting strong growth expectations.

Regional Contagion

The sell-off was not isolated to South Korea. The broader Asian region reflected this risk-off sentiment, with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index falling 1.7%. Weakness in technology and uncertainty surrounding global economic outlooks, particularly US monetary policy, tend to have a cascading effect across regional markets, prompting investors to reduce exposure to riskier assets.

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