The Korea Times

Stock market retreats on multiple negatives

- By Lee Kyung-min lkm@koreatimes.co.kr

The local stock market underwent a wild fluctuatio­n, Monday, rattled by fears of an Iran-Israel conflict and dashed optimism of an earlier-than-expected rate cut by the U.S. Federal Reserve.

Experts say a short-term adjustment of the Korean equity market is inevitable, since the emerging market with little natural resources is extremely vulnerable to currency depreciati­on against the U.S. dollar and global oil price volatility.

Further amplifying the concern is overall losses in the value of undervalue­d local shares, almost all of which reversed months of sharp gains due exclusivel­y to the landslide victory of the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) in last week’s general elections.

The Yoon Suk Yeol administra­tion’s Corporate Value-up Program, designed to buoy the chronicall­y stagnant local stock market, has essentiall­y lost momentum alongside a slew of his fiscally conservati­ve economic policy drives, market watchers say.

According to the Korea Exchange, the benchmark KOSPI ended at 2,670.43 points, down 0.42 percent from the previous session.

Large-cap shares retreated earlier in the day, including Samsung Electronic­s, SK hynix, LG Energy Solution and POSCO Holdings. The drop was in a range of between 1.27 percent and 2.3 percent.

The small-cap tech-heavy Kosdaq ended lower at 852.42 points, down 0.94 percent from the previous session.

The primary factor for Monday’s intraday market tumbles was mounting concerns over Iran’s drone strikes on Israel escalating into what observers fear would trigger a fifth Middle East war.

According to U.S. media outlets, U.S. President Joe Biden called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shortly after Iran’s attack, urging him against launching a counteratt­ack on Iran.

NH Investment & Securities researcher Kim Young-hwan said the local stock market fell due to geopolitic­al risks, but the possibilit­y of war is limited.

“Further escalation to a fullfledge­d war is not likely, as indicated by the initial response of both the U.S. and Iran,” he said. “The future movements of the stock market will be determined by factors including corporate earnings, the timing of the Fed’s pivot and oil prices.”

Hi Investment & Securities researcher Park Sang-hyun said the weakening of Korea’s currency is expected to weigh on the local stock market.

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