The world’s hottest AI stock market just swung nearly 17% in two days

After becoming 2026’s best-performing major stock market on the back of an AI chip boom, South Korea’s KOSPI suffered one of its sharpest drops on record and then rebounded almost as fast.

The 48-hour swing shows how concentrated the global AI trade has become, and why investors in everything from chip stocks to Bitcoin are exposed to sudden shifts in Federal Reserve policy.

The numbers we saw in the past couple of days are the kind normally reserved for volatile cryptocurrencies. KOSPI fell 8.29% on Monday, June 8, closing at 7,484.41 after an automatic 20-minute trading halt froze the market, then jumped 8.18% the next day to close at 8,096.93. Across two sessions, a market worth trillions swung close to 17%.

KOSPI is South Korea’s main stock index, the rough equivalent of the S&P 500. It tracks around 950 companies on the Korea Exchange, weighted by size, which is its main problem: a few chipmakers led by Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix dominate it.

The index’s total value had swelled past 7,000 trillion won, roughly $4.6 trillion, at its peak at the beginning of June, making the Korean market a direct bet on the global AI hardware cycle. Monday’s plunge erased more than 554 trillion won, about $360 billion, in a single day.

How the world’s hottest AI market started swinging like crypto

The run was built almost entirely on AI. KOSPI climbed about 92% in 2026 on demand for AI hardware, rising chip prices, and the race to build data centers, with Samsung and SK Hynix supplying roughly 72% of the gains. When a market leans that heavily on two stocks, the same names tend to drag everything down once the mood turns.

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The trigger came from Washington, where a strong May jobs report on June 5 showed the US adding 172,000 jobs against forecasts near 85,000, the firmest hiring in 18 months. Strong hiring gives the Fed less reason to cut interest rates, and higher rates hit expensive, fast-growing tech companies hardest, since so much of their value rests on profits years away.

Chipmaker Broadcom then forecast weaker AI sales than Wall Street wanted and fell about 13%, dragging the main US chip index down more than 10% on Friday. By the time Seoul opened Monday, Samsung and SK Hynix were down around 10%.

Borrowed money then turned what was already a bad day into a market-halting one. Korea’s retail traders had piled into leveraged bets on the chip giants, and margin debt had hit a record 37.74 trillion won, about $25 billion.

When prices fall against borrowed money, brokers demand more cash, forcing more selling that pushes prices lower still. The market’s fear gauge spiked to a record high, above its financial-crisis peak, as those forced sales accelerated the decline.

The selling didn’t stay contained in Seoul. On Tuesday in the US, the Nasdaq dropped more than 4% by midday before closing down about 1%, as investors dumped the riskiest tech names and rotated into defensive stocks like consumer staples and retailers.

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Among them was Strategy, now seen by TradFi traders as essentially a leveraged bet on Bitcoin, a sign of how closely the AI and crypto trades now move together.

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