The global tech trade is colliding with geopolitical reality, and Asian emerging markets are caught in the crossfire.
For the fourth consecutive month, foreign investors aggressively dumped Asian equities. However, the selloff was highly concentrated. As investors booked profits and reassessed the “AI super-cycle,” South Korea found itself at the absolute epicenter of the capital flight.
💰 THE FUND FLOW METRICS:
- The South Korean Exodus: Foreigners pulled a staggering, record-breaking $13.67 billion out of South Korean equities last month. Consequently, the benchmark KOSPI has slid roughly 10.9% so far this month.
- The Vietnam Spillover: Vietnam also suffered, shedding $301 million in foreign capital—its sharpest monthly outflow since October 2025.
- The Divergence (The Winners): This wasn’t a blind panic across the entire continent. Capital actively rotated into other markets. Taiwan absorbed $4.04 billion in inflows, followed by India ($2.5 billion) and Thailand ($1.75 billion).
⚙️ THE MACRO DRIVERS: WHY KOREA? What caused this historic, targeted unwinding of South Korean equities?
- AI Valuation Jitters: The U.S. Nasdaq Composite fell 3.4% last month as Wall Street finally balked at the lofty valuations and massive capital expenditure plans of major tech firms. This exhaustion instantly reverberated into Asian semiconductor hubs.
- The Oil Shock Threat: Investors heavily unwound crowded South Korean chipmaker positions out of fear that the widening Middle East conflict will trigger an oil price shock. For an energy-importing, manufacturing-heavy economy like South Korea, an oil spike means sticky inflation and delayed interest rate cuts.
- Expensive Non-Tech Sectors: As BNP Paribas analysts noted, while the memory chip super-cycle still has upside, South Korea’s non-tech sectors have simply become too expensive to justify holding through a macro storm.
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: South Korean equities were priced for absolute perfection, relying on a flawless AI hardware rollout and a smooth central bank rate-cut cycle. The moment the Middle East crisis threatened the disinflation narrative—pushing the U.S. dollar and Treasury yields higher—that perfection priced into the KOSPI shattered. The massive inflows into Taiwan and India suggest that global capital isn’t abandoning Asia; it is just aggressively punishing any market where technology valuations have decoupled from macroeconomic risks.
👇 Emerging Market & Macro Strategists: With Taiwan continuing to absorb billions in foreign inflows despite similar semiconductor exposure, is South Korea’s massive selloff an overreaction, or the canary in the coal mine for the rest of the Asian tech supply chain?
