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Just noticed something interesting playing out in the markets this week. South Korea's stock market got absolutely hammered - the Kospi dropped about 20% in just two trading days after retail investors had been on a massive buying spree for months. That index had climbed nearly 180% since mid-2025, mostly chasing AI-related stocks, so this reversal is pretty brutal.
The story here is that Korean retail traders are known for rotating between different speculative plays rather than sitting on the sidelines. When tech stocks cooled off, it looks like some capital started flowing back into crypto. Bitcoin ran up above $73k in the aftermath, and Ether, Solana, and XRP followed with similar moves. Current prices show BTC around $74.39K though the momentum has softened a bit.
What's telling is that the Kimchi premium - basically the price difference between Korean exchanges and global markets - is only hovering around 1%. This suggests there's renewed interest in crypto trading, but we're nowhere near the frenzied speculation we've seen in past Korean market rallies. Back in mid-January the premium actually went negative, so even this modest uptick represents a shift in sentiment.
Looking at the broader analysis, Bitcoin's been struggling to hold above $76K for a solid two-month stretch, and funding rates on major perpetuals remain deeply negative despite rising open interest - suggesting traders are still skeptical despite the recent bounce. The Korean market rotation story is interesting to watch, but the retail signals are still pretty measured compared to historical precedent.