SK Hynix executed a spectacular entrance onto the Nasdaq exchange last Friday, securing $26.5 billion through the sale of 177.9 million American Depositary Receipt shares priced at $149 apiece. The shares jumped approximately 13% during their inaugural trading session. However, the optimistic atmosphere evaporated completely by Monday morning.
The Korean memory chip manufacturer tumbled approximately 15% on the Korea Exchange during Monday’s session. Samsung Electronics experienced a devastating decline of nearly 11%. The combined weight of these losses dragged South Korea’s Kospi Composite Index down roughly 9%, sending it to depths not witnessed since May.
Market observers attribute the dramatic post-listing decline to a well-established trading pattern. Market participants accumulate positions in anticipation of significant catalysts, then liquidate once those events materialize. SK Hynix stock experienced substantial gains leading up to its American listing, only to reverse sharply after the milestone concluded.
A leading analyst from NH Investment & Securities explained that investors were capturing profits following the successful listing. Additionally, growing apprehension surrounding the company’s upcoming second-quarter financial results dampened market enthusiasm.
SK Square, which maintains a substantial ownership position in SK Hynix, plummeted 15%. Samsung Electro-Mechanics suffered a 17% decline, occurring just one week after announcing a $310 million collaborative venture with Sumitomo of Japan to manufacture glass core materials for advanced chip architectures.
The Kospi has now surrendered 26% from its year-to-date peak of 9,387. The index breached critical technical support zones and dropped beneath its 50-day moving average. Technical analysts are now watching the 5,850 level as the next significant support threshold.
The selling pressure extended into US equity markets during premarket trading Monday. Micron Technology declined nearly 6% before the opening bell. Western Digital and Sandisk each retreated approximately 7%. Seagate surrendered close to 5%.
Nvidia dipped about 2%. Advanced Micro Devices declined nearly 3%. Qualcomm and Broadcom each gave up around 2%.
Chip manufacturing equipment suppliers absorbed similar punishment. Lam Research, Applied Materials, and KLA each retreated around 3%. ASML, scheduled to announce quarterly earnings Wednesday, dropped nearly 2%.
Taiwan Semiconductor, which will unveil second-quarter financial results Thursday, also traded lower. Arista Networks stood as one of the rare technology names posting gains.
The Kospi’s decline intensified due to escalating friction between Washington and Tehran. Iran blockaded the Strait of Hormuz during the weekend, prompting American aerial bombardment. Iran subsequently launched attacks targeting US military installations in Jordan and throughout Gulf nations.
South Korea maintains heavy dependence on Middle Eastern petroleum imports, rendering its economy particularly vulnerable to crude price volatility. Brent crude advanced to $79 while WTI reached $74.30.
The Bank of Korea is anticipated to implement a 0.25% interest rate increase on Wednesday. Accelerating energy expenses and rising compensation levels within the semiconductor industry are fueling inflationary pressures, while the won recently touched a historic low before stabilizing at 1,507 versus the dollar.
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