
Crypto has struggled to find sustained upside in recent months. Bitcoin and major altcoins have attempted rebounds, yet momentum has lacked conviction. At the same time, one of the most historically active retail markets in digital assets appears to be redirecting capital. South Korea stocks are now the ones attracting that liquidity.
Market analyst Bull Theory, in a tweet, pointed out that the KOSPI index has reached a new all-time high. The index is up nearly 175% over the past year, making it one of the strongest rallies among major global markets. That kind of performance does not happen in isolation. It signals concentrated capital flows.
The rally in South Korea stocks is closely tied to the semiconductor sector. Companies such as Samsung Electronics and SK hynix carry substantial weight within the KOSPI index. When earnings expectations rise for these firms, the broader market follows.
Export data reinforces the trend. Early February figures show daily average exports up 47% year over year despite fewer working days due to the Lunar New Year holiday. Semiconductor exports alone jumped 134% year over year and now account for more than one third of total shipments.
BREAKING: 🇰🇷 South Korea’s stock market just hit a new ALL TIME HIGH.
— Bull Theory (@BullTheoryio) February 26, 2026
The KOSPI index is now up nearly 175% over the past year, one of the strongest rallies among major global markets. This rally is being driven largely by one sector: semiconductors.
Chipmakers like Samsung… pic.twitter.com/jiTnhBWifa
Bull Theory explains that global demand for AI infrastructure is directly boosting revenue expectations for these chipmakers. Strong export growth translates into stronger equity valuations. Retail capital tends to follow sectors that show measurable earnings acceleration.
Crypto Markets Face Liquidity Rotation As Kimchi Premium Compresses
This capital rotation has implications for crypto. South Korea has long been a retail-driven crypto market. During strong bull cycles, assets such as Bitcoin and Ethereum often trade at higher prices on Korean exchanges than on global platforms. That gap is known as the Kimchi Premium.
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The Kimchi Premium has compressed significantly since the October market correction last year. Bull Theory notes that retail liquidity in Korea may not have vanished. It may have simply redirected toward domestic AI and semiconductor equities.
That divergence creates a visible contrast. South Korea stocks continue printing record highs. Crypto markets remain in recovery mode. When retail capital reallocates, digital assets can experience slower momentum.
Retail investors typically gravitate toward sectors with clearer earnings visibility. Semiconductor companies benefit directly from AI hardware demand. Crypto markets depend more heavily on macro liquidity cycles and sentiment.
Bull Theory frames this as a liquidity rotation story rather than a structural decline in crypto interest. Retail participation remains active. It is simply pursuing opportunities tied to tangible export growth and AI expansion.
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Whether this rotation persists will depend on relative performance. If crypto regains momentum, liquidity could rotate back. For now, the KOSPI all-time high and the compressed Kimchi Premium highlight a clear theme. Capital is flowing toward South Korea stocks as crypto works to regain strength.
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