Market·2026-07-09

Kospi Whipsawed by Iran-US Military Clash, Chip and Nuclear Stocks Cushion the Fall

Markets

Kospi Whipsaws on Geopolitical Risk, Closes Slightly Higher

Kospi opened lower and briefly pared losses in the morning. But around midday, news that Iran's Revolutionary Guard had struck US military bases in Kuwait and Bahrain pushed the decline to roughly 2%, and the sell-off deepened further after word came that US Central Command had struck about 90 Iranian military sites.

Even so, foreign and institutional investors—led by pension funds—kept buying, and large-cap chip stocks such as SK Hynix turned higher, helping both the Kospi and Kosdaq trim losses and close slightly in positive territory. Foreign investors also bought Kospi futures for a third straight session.

Some market watchers noted that the pullback has pushed Korea's forward price-to-earnings ratio down to roughly the low six-times range, a level they see as undervalued. Still, lingering geopolitical uncertainty left room for caution about further downside.

Meanwhile, leveraged and inverse ETFs continued to dominate trading-value rankings, with derivatives flows increasingly driving index swings more than the fundamentals of individual stocks.

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