Stocks

South Korea’s KOSPI index hits four-year high following short-selling ban extension

1 Mins read

© Reuters.

South Korea’s index surged to a four-year high on Monday, following the Financial Supervisory Commission’s decision to extend an eight-month ban on naked short-selling until June 2024. The rally was spearheaded by foreign investors, who account for 67.9% of this year’s cumulative short-selling, resulting in a net buying of over 500 billion won ($385 million) on the KOSPI. The buying spree was partly due to short covering, pushing the KOSPI above the 2,500 mark for the first time since September 22.

Secondary battery shares and hospitality stocks saw significant gains, leading to a five-minute sidecar curb on the Kosdaq due to price volatility. Notable gainers included LG Energy Solution, POSCO (NYSE:) Holdings, POSCO Future M, Hotel Shilla, Lotte Tour, EcoPro BM, and EcoPro.

The value of traded shares by foreign investors reached 107.63 trillion won, compared to 48.22 trillion won by institutional investors and 2.66 trillion won by retail investors. However, analysts warn of potential short-lived rallies and massive foreign capital flight due to Korea’s ban on short selling being perceived as against international norms. This could impact Korea’s bid for development market status from Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI).

The decision to fully ban short selling by the first half of next year was influenced by previous financial crises including the global financial crisis, European sovereign debt crisis, and COVID-19 pandemic. This ban has been criticized by domestic retail investors for moral hazards and market disruption caused by powerful foreign investors known as “black-haired foreigners” using YouTube channels to spread negative signals.

The KOSDAQ also experienced a surge following this announcement, increasing to 839.45 points. Secondary battery companies Kumyang, POSCO Future M, Ecopro BM, and Ecopro saw their stock prices hit the maximum daily limit of ±30 percent. This led to a temporary trading halt on the KOSDAQ for the first time in over three years. The won-dollar exchange rate closed at 1,297.3 won per dollar.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

Read the full article here

Related posts
Stocks

NVIDIA launches 800Gb/s networking platforms for AI By Investing.com

2 Mins read
SAN JOSE, Calif. – NVIDIA (NASDAQ:) has unveiled its latest networking platforms, the Quantum-X800 InfiniBand and Spectrum-X800 Ethernet, which are the first…
Stocks

Upexi CEO buys $44.7k in company stock By Investing.com

2 Mins read
In a recent move, Allan Marshall, the Chief Executive Officer of UPEXI, Inc. (NASDAQ:UPXI), a company specializing in medicinal chemicals and botanical…
Stocks

Apple dominates buybacks as S&P 500 share repurchases jump by nearly fifth in Q4 By Investing.com

2 Mins read
Investing.com — Stock buybacks among companies climbed by nearly a fifth in the fourth quarter from the prior quarter, with Apple leading…
Get The Latest News

Subscribe to get the top fintech and
finance news and updates.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *