Korean margin debt hits record KRW 36.5T; short balances up 67% YTD as KOSPI 70% rally fuels leverage surge
Original: 신용융자 잔고 36.47조원 역대 최고 View original →
Leverage built alongside a 70% KOSPI rally
Korean equity margin lending reached a record KRW 36.47 trillion (approximately $25.7 billion) as of May 15, up KRW 9.18 trillion (+33.66%) from the year-end 2025 baseline of KRW 27.29 trillion. The surge reflects retail investor borrowing that has tracked closely with the KOSPI's approximately 70% year-to-date gain.
Short-selling balances have expanded in parallel. As of May 12, short balances stood at KRW 20.58 trillion, up 67.18% year-to-date and approaching the all-time peak of KRW 21.17 trillion recorded on May 11. Both the long-leveraged and short-leveraged sides of the market have grown simultaneously, compressing the margin for error when external shocks arrive.
Securities firms warn of cascading forced-liquidation risk
Major Korean brokerage firms have issued explicit warnings about systemic risk. When margin-financed positions breach collateral ratio thresholds, they trigger automatic forced-liquidation sales, which depress prices and risk setting off additional margin calls across connected positions. Intraday market capitalization turnover reached 0.85% in May, up from 0.59% in April, indicating a shift toward short-horizon speculative trading consistent with margin-amplified momentum strategies.
What to watch
The risk crystallizes when an external shock triggers simultaneous collateral breaches across margin accounts. The May 15 global bond rout — S&P 500 -1.24%, 10-year Treasury yield +116 basis points — is the type of event that could push Korean markets toward that threshold. Near-term indicators include the Korea Exchange (KRX) weekly margin balance report (every Thursday) and the Bank of Korea (BoK) rate decision scheduled for May 29.
Not investment advice. Verify all figures with primary sources before acting.
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South Korea's KOSPI crossed 8,000 for the first time in history on May 15, peaking at 8,046.78 before a circuit breaker was triggered as KOSPI 200 futures fell more than 5%. The index closed at 7,493.18, down 6.12%, as foreign investors dumped a net KRW 5 trillion in a single session. Retail investors' seven-day, KRW 30-trillion buying streak could not offset the outflow, while KB Securities raised its KOSPI target from 7,500 to 10,500.
South Korea's KOSPI benchmark crossed 7,000 for the first time in its history on May 6, 2026, surging 4.54% to 7,252.09 in early trade. The milestone is driven by semiconductor-sector strength — buoyed by AMD's 15% overnight gain — and optimism over U.S.-Iran ceasefire talks that eased oil-supply risk.
South Korea's KOSPI closed at a record 7,822.24 on May 11, adding 324 points (+4.32%) as semiconductor stocks repriced after the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index surged 5.51% on May 8. SK Hynix cleared 190,000 KRW (+11%) and Samsung Electronics crossed 280,000 KRW (+6%), putting the 8,000 level within 2.2% reach.
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