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KRX Puts Brakes on Weekly Options for Samsung, SK Hynix, Hyundai Motor and LG Energy Solution as KOSPI Volatility Forces Rethink

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KRX Puts Brakes on Weekly Options for Samsung, SK Hynix, Hyundai Motor and LG Energy Solution as KOSPI Volatility Forces Rethink

South Korea's Korea Exchange (KRX) has indefinitely postponed the June 29 launch of weekly single-stock options covering four of the country's most-traded equities — Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), SK Hynix (000660.KS), Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) and LG Energy Solution (373220.KS) — citing volatile market conditions that regulators said made it premature to introduce new complex derivatives products.

The four contracts were announced less than four weeks ago on June 1 and were designed to expand Korea's thin single-stock derivatives market by adding weekly-expiry options alongside existing monthly contracts. The postponement, disclosed Wednesday, offers no new target date.

"We plan to proceed with the listing after considering future market conditions and overall readiness," the exchange said in a statement.

The Volatility Backdrop

The decision reflects turbulence that has gripped Korean equities in recent weeks. The benchmark KOSPI index fell approximately 10 percent during early to mid-June, triggering multiple circuit-breaker halts and prompting heavy selling by foreign investors, who withdrew roughly USD 13.2 billion (KRW 19.0 trillion) from Korean equities in a single week during May.

Retail participation in leveraged instruments has already drawn regulatory scrutiny. Leveraged single-stock ETFs linked to Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix — which together account for roughly 45 percent of KOSPI market capitalisation — ballooned to USD 9.1 billion (KRW 13.2 trillion) in assets under management, with 92 percent of holders being individual investors. Financial Supervisory Service Governor Lee Chan-jin, speaking on June 22, said he "regretted the speed at which the leveraged ETFs were approved" — a rare public admission that product innovation had outpaced investor protection.

Market Depth vs. Stability

Weekly options are widely used in the United States — the Chicago Board Options Exchange's S&P 500 weekly contracts now account for more than half of all equity-index options volume — as tools for fine-grained hedging and income generation. KRX's initiative mirrored a regional trend: Japan's Tokyo Stock Exchange and Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing have expanded single-stock derivatives offerings over the past two years.

For Korea, the four underlying stocks represent a natural starting point. Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), the country's most actively traded equity, accounted for roughly 18 percent of KOSPI turnover in Q1 2026. SK Hynix (000660.KS) has surged more than 347 percent year-to-date as investors price in an HBM memory supercycle. Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) and LG Energy Solution (373220.KS) rank among the exchange's ten most liquid names.

Implications for Market Participants

Market participants that had positioned for the June 29 launch — including domestic brokerages that had drafted marketing materials and option-pricing models — now face an uncertain waiting period. Options market makers typically require stable underlying volatility to quote tight bid-ask spreads; the current environment, with KOSPI implied volatility elevated, makes product pricing difficult.

The delay also signals a broader regulatory posture in which the Financial Supervisory Service and KRX are coordinating to slow the introduction of products that could amplify retail losses during market downturns. KRX said it would reassess timing once it determined that conditions were conducive to "stable operation of the market and smooth adoption of the new products."


Sources: Asia Business Daily; Bloomberg / Reuters (via TradingView); CryptoBriefing

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