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Korea's Samsung, SK Hynix Single-Stock Leverage ETFs Churn ₩37 Trillion in Turnover in Four Days, Stoking Overheating Alarms

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Korea's Samsung, SK Hynix Single-Stock Leverage ETFs Churn ₩37 Trillion in Turnover in Four Days, Stoking Overheating Alarms

Korea's Samsung, SK Hynix Single-Stock Leverage ETFs Churn ₩37 Trillion in Turnover in Four Days, Stoking Overheating Alarms

A new generation of single-stock leveraged exchange-traded funds tracking Samsung Electronics (005930.KS, Korea's largest company and top memory-chip maker) and SK Hynix (000660.KS, the world's leading high-bandwidth-memory supplier) has generated nearly ₩37 trillion in trading turnover within four trading sessions of launch — a flood of retail leverage now concentrated in the two names that already dominate Korea's market. (Turnover measures cumulative buy-and-sell trading value, not net money raised by the funds.)

The immediate question for an overseas manager watching the KOSPI (Korea's benchmark stock index) on its record run is not whether AI memory demand is real; it plainly is. It is whether this leverage is distorting the price of the two stocks that drive the index, and how close the market is to a forced unwind.

How big the flows actually are

Combined turnover in the 16 single-stock leveraged and inverse ETFs built on Samsung and SK Hynix reached about ₩36.9 trillion ($27 billion) from their listing through June 1, according to Korea Exchange (KRX, Korea's bourse operator) data cited by Chosun Biz. The products began trading on May 27. Retail money led the charge: the TIGER SK Hynix Single-Stock Leverage ETF alone drew ₩1.47 trillion ($1.08 billion) in individual net buying over the period — the single largest retail net purchase of any stock or ETF listed in Korea, per the same KRX tally reported by Chosun Biz.

To size that against the market: ₩37 trillion of turnover in four days is not a niche product launch. Independent English-language coverage by Seoul Economic Daily put combined turnover at ₩27.871 trillion over just the first three sessions (May 27–29), averaging more than ₩9 trillion a day and effectively dominating Korea's ETF tape — consistent with the higher four-day figure.

The distortion is already visible

The concentration is bending relative performance inside the chip sector itself. On May 27, Samsung rose 2.68% and SK Hynix jumped 9.31%, yet established diversified semiconductor ETFs lagged badly because their other large holdings fell the same day — DB HiTek dropped 8.39%, Hanmi Semiconductor 3.04% and Eo Technics 5.85%, according to Chosun Biz. Two diversified products, KODEX Semiconductor Leverage and TIGER Semiconductor TOP10 Leverage, issued price-divergence excess-disclosure notices near that session's close as money rotated out of baskets and into the two single names, the same report said.

The mechanism analysts worry about is structural. "Single-stock leveraged ETFs have a structure that rebalances returns daily, which can further amplify the price volatility of the underlying asset," Kim Jin-young, an analyst at Kiwoom Securities (a Korean brokerage), told Chosun Biz, adding that the products are better suited to short-term trading than long-term holding because repeated up-and-down moves can leave holders with losses even if the stock ends flat. Because the funds must buy more as prices rise and sell as they fall to hit their daily multiple, large balances can magnify swings in stocks that already anchor the index.

Leverage gauges at record highs

The single-stock ETF launch landed on top of broader leverage that is already stretched. KOSPI short-selling turnover hit ₩5.33 trillion ($3.9 billion) on May 29 — the highest since short-selling was fully reinstated in March 2025, per Chosun Biz. Securities-lending balances reached ₩190.96 trillion ($139 billion) on June 1, a record, while margin-credit commitments stood at ₩38.02 trillion ($27.8 billion) on May 29 and KOSPI margin loans rose to ₩28.02 trillion ($20.5 billion), also a record, according to Korea Financial Investment Association figures cited in the same report. Short interest, lending and margin debt climbing together is the classic late-cycle signature of a crowded, leveraged trade.

Why the two stocks are the magnet

The fundamentals giving cover to the mania are genuine. Samsung's market value broke above $1.54 trillion (about ₩2,120 trillion) intraday on June 2, overtaking Meta Platforms ($1.524 trillion) to enter the global top 10 and briefly passing Tesla ($1.561 trillion) into ninth before easing back, according to companiesmarketcap.com data reported by Newsis. SK Hynix reached roughly $1.085 trillion, 13th globally and closing on Micron's $1.167 trillion in 12th. Seoul Economic Daily, citing the same tracker, put Samsung at $1.56 trillion and SK Hynix at $1.104 trillion the same day. Nvidia led all listed companies at $5.434 trillion, ahead of Alphabet ($4.513 trillion) and Apple ($4.498 trillion), per the Newsis report. Foreign coverage tied the re-rating to surging HBM demand, with TradingKey flagging HBM4 expectations as a catalyst.

Fund houses are leaning into the same two names. Korea Investment Trust Management (a Korean asset manager) listed its ACE High-Dividend Plus Covered-Call Active ETF on the KOSPI on June 2, adding Samsung and SK Hynix on top of 20 selected high-dividend stocks, the firm said in a statement carried by Yonhap and Asia Economy — a sign even income-oriented products now feel compelled to bolt the chip duo on.

What to watch

The open question is whether the leverage unwinds in an orderly drip or a forced cascade. The first concrete tells will be daily KRX figures on single-stock leveraged ETF balances and turnover, the next KOFIA margin-loan and securities-lending prints, and whether more diversified ETFs trip divergence-disclosure thresholds — each a measurable signal of whether the crowding is cooling or tightening. With Samsung and SK Hynix together carrying an outsized share of the KOSPI, any sharp reversal in the two stocks would propagate through both the leveraged ETF complex and the cash market at once.


This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Figures are as reported on the dates cited and reflect intraday or period-end values that may since have changed.


Sources

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