By Cynthia Kim and Yena Park
SEOUL, June 8 (Reuters) – Seoul resident Laura Byun has long preferred U.S. mutual funds over Korean shares, but the KOSPI’s blistering rally changed that and her risk tolerance for debt.
Feeling left out by the surge that has propelled the Korean benchmark to the world’s best performer, Byun tapped a short-term bank overdraft of about 15 million won ($9,687) to buy a leveraged Samsung Electronics fund, delivering gains of about 20%.
Then came the reversal. By Monday morning, her position had swung to -17%, she said, after the KOSPI plunged by over 8% in the wake of a tech selloff in U.S. markets.
The leveraged ETF tied to the chip giant tumbled as growing bets on a Federal Reserve rate hike snapped Wall Street’s nine-week winning run, wiping out her gains and dragging her into losses.
“I’m not gonna do anything. I don’t know, I’m gonna wait for a rebound, unless like it halves or something,” Byun said.
Her experience captures a growing risk in South Korea’s markets, exposing how borrowed bets by a swelling wave of retail investors, known as “ants”, are chasing a runaway stock rally and rattling policymakers wary of sharper volatility and a painful correction.
A Bank of Korea (BOK) report on Thursday showed leveraged investment into equities by retail investors topped a record 60 trillion won ($39.06 billion) as of the end of May, as the KOSPI more than doubled in just six months to become the world’s top performer.
Powering part of that debt push was the May 27 introduction of South Korea’s first-ever single-stock leveraged ETFs linked to chipmakers Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix – whose profits have soared with the AI boom – that offered investors double the daily return of the stocks.
Demand was so strong that the Korea Financial Investment Association’s (KOFIA) website crashed on the first day retail investors were required to complete mandatory training to trade the products, according to applicants such as Byun. More than 350,000 people have since completed the course, KOFIA said.
FOMO STOKES LEVERAGE RISKS
But leverage cuts both ways. The ETFs double losses as well as gains, within South Korea’s cap of twice a stock’s daily move – a feature regulators say many latecomers may underestimate.
“Investors should be cautious of amplified market volatility during potential downturns, particularly if late comers to the market increasingly rely on leverage to chase stock surges out of FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out),” the BOK said, adding that the margin loans are concentrated on chip shares.







