Korean Youth, Making a 'Last Stand' in an Epic Bull Market

marsbitPublicado a 2026-06-11Actualizado a 2026-06-11

Resumen

South Korea is experiencing an unprecedented stock market boom in the first half of 2026, with the KOSPI index doubling in six months, driven primarily by tech giants Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix. This "epic bull run," tied to the semiconductor cycle, has sparked a nationwide frenzy for stock trading. The country, with a population of just over 50 million, now has over 105 million securities accounts. The article, from the perspective of a Chinese national living in Seoul, explores how this speculative fever reflects deeper societal anxieties among Korean youth. Facing stagnant wages, high costs of living, housing pressures, and rigid social stratification, many young people see the volatile market as a "last chance" to alter their predetermined life trajectories and escape financial precarity. Stories include a young office worker investing her meager savings, a couple delaying marriage due to financial pressures, and a seasoned trader navigating exclusive social circles where market information is currency. However, the boom also exposes and exacerbates existing inequalities. While some achieve windfalls, others face devastating losses, with borrowing to invest reaching record highs. The narrative contrasts the illusion of equal opportunity with the harsh reality that the ability to absorb risk is unevenly distributed. Ultimately, the market frenzy is portrayed not as a solution, but as a symptom of a generation's struggle against a system offering limited upward mobi...

Original: Li Yuning, Daily People

 

In the first half of 2026, an epic bull market tied to the chip industry swept South Korea. The KOSPI index doubled within six months, with Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix becoming the core of the rally, fundamentally rewriting the life trajectories of countless ordinary Koreans.

South Korea's total population is just over 50 million, yet the number of securities accounts has exceeded 105 million. With an average of two stock accounts per person, the fervor for stock trading has reached unprecedented heights. Borrowing money to invest in stocks has repeatedly hit new highs, intensifying risk hazards.

People who once focused on their work and daily lives have flocked to the market. Some have quit their jobs to trade stocks full-time, while others watch the market on their work desks or during their commutes. Stocks have transformed from a simple investment into a topic of fate discussed by the masses. Countless young Koreans see the stock market as the last opportunity to break through their current situations and turn their lives around, diving in with the fear of being left behind by the times.

This article, from the perspective of a Chinese person living in Korea, visits ordinary investors of different backgrounds. It seeks to interpret, beyond the surface frenzy of the stock market, the underlying survival anxiety, class dilemmas of Korean youth, and the social dangers hidden beneath the national speculation craze. Enjoy:

Li Yuning is a Chinese woman living in Seoul. In 2022, she quit her job in China, went to Korea to study Korean and pursue a Ph.D., and after graduation stayed to work at a research institute in Korea. Her mornings were spent checking emails, her days writing reports, and her evenings dining with friends. For a long time, her life was not close to the stock market.

It wasn't until the beginning of this year that she opened her first Korean stock account. Identity verification, account linkage, trading agreement forms popped up one after another on her phone screen, followed by a string of red and blue numbers—the code that has dictated the fate of Koreans over the past six months.

This rare bull market since the start of this year has been called an epic rally that deeply binds Korea's national destiny with the chip cycle. The KOSPI index (Korea Composite Stock Price Index) doubled from 4,000 to over 8,000 points in half a year, with Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix contributing to nearly 80% of the gains.

Especially since this spring, friends have started talking frequently about Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, and the U.S. stock market close. Before, they talked about stocks like a technical skill; later, they talked about stocks like fate. Some took leave to watch the market, some refreshed their accounts in the restroom, and some even quit their jobs because of KOSPI's rise, becoming full-time investors at home. They no longer said they were unemployed, but that they had finally "escaped the salary."

One of Li Yuning's friends originally worked as a project manager at a trading company in Gangnam. Last year, she was still complaining about a meager year-end bonus. A few days ago, she suddenly sent a photo of a sports car steering wheel in a group chat, captioned only: "하닉이 사준 차." (A car bought by Hynix). A covert comparison was laid bare on the table: working the same hours, putting in the same overtime, why could someone, with just a few purchases, leave behind years of someone else's salary?

But few seriously discuss the dark side of the bull market. Data shows the number of securities accounts in Korea has reached about 105 million, while the total population is just over 50 million. In today's Korea, one might not have a house or children, but on average, they own 2 stock accounts.

The stock market has thus entered the lives of ordinary people prematurely. But when the money comes from loans, homes, parents' pensions, or children's education funds, losses are no longer just shrinking numbers. They become sleepless nights, unanswered calls, and a body sitting at the office the next day, unable to work.

In December 2025, in Yongin, Korea, a man in his 40s died after telling his family he "lost 200 million won in stocks." His 9-year-old son was also found dead. This is not just a sensational story. For many ordinary people, stocks are never just numbers on a screen. They are linked to debt, marriage, parents' life savings, and determine whether one can continue to believe in themselves.

Li Yuning is both an observer and a participant. She was swept into this stock market frenzy and also gained insight into the mental state and generational portrait of Korean youth behind it. She specifically met with her Korean friends to talk about how this bull market is repricing ordinary lives.

"The young 'ants' are staking their limited chips, as if this is the last chance for a turnaround. Anyway, it can't get much worse."

The following is her narrative:

01 Nationwide Stock Trading

To wake up early to watch the market, Koreans' sleep has been further "evolved" away. The Korean morning, which once began with checking the weather, now starts with the securities app.

This is a bull market that has ordinary people betting their "fate." By early June, the KOSPI index had risen over 108% year-to-date. This gain surpassed the Nasdaq-100's rise during the 1999 dot-com bubble and also exceeded the historical peak during Korea's industrial boom in the late 1980s. The total market capitalization of Korean listed companies surged 86% year-to-date to about $5 trillion, vaulting Korea to become the world's sixth-largest stock market.

In early May, the number of Korean securities accounts had already exceeded 105 million, more than double the total population. On May 27, the Korea Exchange launched leveraged ETFs for single stocks for the first time, initially tracking the two core Korean tech stocks, Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix. Such products carry high leverage risks, so regulators require buyers to complete an online "risk" education course beforehand. On the day the ETFs launched, the online education website was briefly overwhelmed. Thus, the stock market, via Samsung and Hynix, burst into ordinary people's commutes, lunch breaks, group chats, and family ledgers.

Minji is one of the young people who opened an account amid this frenzy. I met Minji during a part-time job. She is 29, from North Gyeongsang Province. That area is somewhat like Korea's "old industrial heartland": factories, ports, silent parents, and increasingly fewer young people. After graduation, she came to Seoul and works as a planner at an advertising agency. The job sounds respectable, but after insurance and taxes, she takes home only 2.8 million won per month (approx. 13,000 RMB). After rent, transportation, food, phone bills, what's left blows away with the wind.

She lives in Sillim-dong, a place somewhat like Beijing's Tiantongyuan, packed with office workers, civil service exam students, convenience store night-shift part-timers, and recent graduates. The cheapest housing in Korea is called a "banjiha" (semi-basement)—damp, dark, with the risk of backflow during the rainy season. Minji has already climbed from the semi-basement to above ground, living in a small studio costing about 600,000 won per month (approx. 3,000 RMB) with a 10 million won deposit (approx. 50,000 RMB). The room isn't big, but it has a window, light, and also the illusion that "at least I'm still moving up."

If nothing unexpected happened, Minji would endure a few years at the ad agency, with wages slowly rising; then marry an ordinary office worker, combine savings, parental support, and bank loans to move to an apartment on Seoul's outskirts or in a new town in Gyeonggi Province. It seems she finally moved from the provinces to Seoul, from a semi-basement to above ground, from renting to an apartment. But essentially, it's just paying rent to a landlord when young and paying interest to the bank when middle-aged. So-called stability is just anxiety given a more respectable name.

It was precisely when this path was narrowing that the stock market crashed into her life. It's dangerous, yet more like an exit than the life composed of salary and rent. When Subway Line 2 pulls into Sillim Station, she gets pushed onto the train. On the subway before, she'd first check KakaoTalk (Korea's "WeChat"); now, she opens the securities app first. When she first bought just two shares, she felt a bit embarrassed, as if mimicking others getting rich. But compared to losses, she was more afraid that years later, when people talked about this semiconductor bull market, she would again be like when she missed out on real estate, cryptocurrency, and the AI-driven U.S. stock rally by Nvidia, and could only say: "I didn't buy back then."

Compared to single white-collar workers with no dependents, family users are more cautious about stock trading.

Junho is the boyfriend of a senior sister I knew from school, age 33. They've been out of university for three years but still aren't married. He commutes from Incheon to Yeouido for work, with a decent salary. He has an Excel spreadsheet detailing his saved-up "jeonse" deposit (lump-sum deposit for rent-free housing), wedding budget, and parents' medical emergency funds. In Korea, an ordinary wedding—venue, banquet, wedding dress, makeup—easily costs close to 30 million won (approx. 150,000 RMB); add the jeonse deposit for a newlywed home, and marriage instantly becomes a ledger of hundreds of millions of won. Junho wants to get married, but the spreadsheet isn't finished. He used to believe that filling in the cells one by one, life would move forward. But after this bull market arrived, he felt for the first time that the spreadsheet was calculating too slowly. When he entered the market, stock prices were already high, so he just tested the waters with a small amount.

"Is it still too late?" is the "FOMO" emotion shrouding ordinary Koreans. Eunju, the receptionist at a skin clinic I often visit, quit her job after having a child. In her mom group chat, topics once centered on English academies and pediatricians, but recently turned entirely to stocks. Eunju is also tempted, but she first thinks of the family ledger. That money seems to be in the account, but it's already earmarked for the child, husband, and parents' lives. She hesitates to take the plunge.

Among all friends, Sookoo is the one most basking in glory in this bull market. As a veteran stock trader, he's the kind who long ago treated the stock market as a second life, watching financial news on the treadmill, opening the securities app after a workout. Since this semiconductor bull market arrived, he often semi-jokingly messages me: "Made 20 million won (approx. 90,000 RMB) across three accounts today, I'm treating for Korean beef tonight." Other times he says: "Lost a Ferrari today." It sounds exaggerated, but it's like a new language in this bull market: talking about losses as sports cars also means he's regained the right to speak.

His father's and sister's funds are entrusted to him for stock trading. This isn't just Sookoo's story. In Korea's current bull market, more and more young people aren't just using their own savings but also borrowing family funds to buy stocks, even directly borrowing from securities firms to enter the market. Korean media, citing Korea Financial Investment Association statistics, reported that the daily average "borrowed money for stock trading" had risen to about 33.8 trillion won by April this year, a monthly record high. By May 21, Korea's total borrowed money for stock buying had risen to 36 trillion won. What's rising is stock prices; what's being staked is ordinary people's credit and future, brought forward.

These frenziedly entering Korean retail investors are called "ants," with young investors called "youth ants." The term carries a subtle sense of fate. Ants are too small, can only crawl close to the ground, carrying bits of principal, judgment, and luck in the vast financial market. Yet "they" keep surging into this army. Not because they all believe they can beat the market, but because they know staying put is equally dangerous.

02 Bull Market Widening Korea's Wealth and Class Gap

No one admits at the outset that they bought stocks because they were afraid of being left behind by the times. They'll say they're just trying a little; they'll say everyone is watching Samsung and Hynix, and it'd be strange not to. But ultimately, what weighs on the heart often isn't greed, but a sense of absence.

This is how Minji started buying stocks. She doesn't understand financial reports, can't clearly explain semiconductor cycles, only knows HBM (High Bandwidth Memory) is hot, SK Hynix rises fast, and everyone in the group says "it's not too late." One evening, she met a college friend in Hongdae. The friend sat down and immediately opened the securities app to show her, saying the Hynix bought last year had already risen a lot. The friend said it lightly: "Just bought a little randomly, didn't expect it to rise like this." Minji also smiled and said, "That's great." On the way home that day, standing by the subway door, looking at her reflection in the glass, she suddenly felt very tired. Not because her friend made money, but because of the tone of that "just bought a little randomly." Some people's random is another person's too late.

In Korea's workplace, "salary poverty" is becoming a topic. "Lately, it's not people working, it's stocks working." "Labor income has become beggars in a bull market." Even without fantasies of overnight riches, ordinary people working step-by-step and saving money also seem "pitiful."

Junho felt the orderly life he was diligently building being challenged. He was still working hard at life but suddenly became poor. This "suddenly becoming poor" isn't someone actually going bankrupt, but the frame of reference changed. His girlfriend sometimes says: "You should also learn to invest. Others buy Hynix and earn a deposit in a few months." Before, Junho compared wages, positions, and tenure with others; now, he's forced to compare holdings, entry timing, and account gains.

Eunju, the housewife, hasn't truly entered the market, so she hasn't suffered actual losses, but she gradually feels a gap with others. Once, someone in the mom group said they made money from stocks and planned to move their child to a more expensive English academy. Her child is still at that ordinary cram school. The teacher is very responsible, corrects homework meticulously. But when the mom group mentions the teacher, they always add lightly: "The person is responsible, just their educational background is ordinary." In Korea's education market, whether a teacher is from SKY (acronym for Seoul National, Korea, and Yonsei Universities), has overseas experience, whether their accent sounds like a "native speaker," all become price tags in parents' eyes. And the bull market widens the gap between children who were originally at the same starting point.

The stock market is a metaphor for social circles. Sookoo understands better than anyone that stock trading in Korea isn't just about opening a securities app to place an order. It also involves joining groups, reading reports, maintaining relationships, treating meals, giving gifts, even learning at the dinner table to judge which words are real news and which are just someone wanting you to hold the bag.

Years ago, he was just a small presence in a Kakao finance group. The group was named "Market Study Room," sounding like an ordinary study group, but was actually more like a small-scale social club: former securities firm employees, asset managers, veteran stock traders, and a few people like himself wanting to climb up.

Every morning at 8:30, the group became active. Some posted U.S. market closes, some posted institutional reports, some screenshotted foreign investor movements. Those with accurate judgments, fast news, and still had capital had a voice. Those who continuously lost money, whose words were ignored, slowly disappeared, "got" removed from the group. Many such stock trading groups operate, filter, narrow in Korea, very much like the constant tightening of upward social circles.

Sookoo was taken under the wing of a "finance big brother" not by one accurate call, but by long-term relationship maintenance. He often visited seniors in different cities, booked restaurants, asked Chinese friends to bring Maotai liquor. When the market was good, dinner gatherings were like information exchanges; when the market was bad, they were like relationship lifelines. Before, when Sookoo's Mercedes-Benz parked in front of a Japanese restaurant, his Rolex peeking from his sleeve, and the finance big brother got into the passenger seat, he felt an illusion: he was finally seen by this circle. In such circles, money isn't just capital; it's also a voice. When an account still had weight, jokes were acknowledged, judgments were listened to; when the account lightened, the person lightened too.

The bull market created many stimulating stories: profit screenshots, resignations, sports car photos. People seemed to finally hold their heads high, loudly declaring they were severing ties with their previously humble, managed lives, from being "wage workers" to "people choosing their lives."

Some Koreans I know, after making money in the stock market, really quit their jobs, even some who turned in their civil servant ID cards. The basic salary for entry-level Korean civil servants is about 2.13 million won (approx. 10,000 RMB), even lower than the 2026 standard minimum monthly wage. The so-called "iron rice bowl," in the face of Seoul's rent, living costs, and class anxiety, is often just a bowl that won't break but also can't be filled with rice. So a sudden sum of money in an account wasn't just profit for them, but a ticket to escape their original track. Some became full-time stock traders; some took their stock market earnings to Vietnam, starting a different life anew.

03 Class Illusion Revealed by the Bull Market: Opportunity Isn't Equal for All

If you only look at accounts, the Korean bull market looks like an opportunity; if you look at the lives behind the accounts, it's more like a stress test. Stocks start to examine each person's life in reverse: salary, debt, children, parents, house, and marriage are all laid back on the table.

In 2022, after Korea's previous metaverse rally collapsed, Sookoo also sold his Mercedes to repay loans. The day he sold the car, he washed it very clean, even patted the floor mats a few times. After the transaction, he took the subway home alone. That day, he realized for the first time that asset decline isn't an abstract term. It becomes concrete to no longer being able to drive to meet friends, no longer being able to casually treat meals.

But even at his most destitute, he didn't sell that Rolex. He locked it in a small safe, next to a few loan documents. "If I sold it, it would mean admitting that life of ascent never belonged to me."

Fortunately, in this bull market, Sookoo, backed by his family, made a comeback. His father helped handle some high-interest debt and gave him more money. With three family accounts combined, Sookoo regained the capital to re-enter the market and the confidence to sit back at the dinner table.

The stock market creates a "fantasy" of class ascension for ordinary people. A friend of a friend, Seongmin, works at an auto parts company near Ulsan; his wife is an elementary school teacher. He made some money in this rally. At first, when his wife saw the profit screenshot, she said: "In that case, let's take an overseas trip?" Seongmin immediately said: "No, haven't sold yet, and there's tax, plus we need to consider parents' insurance premiums."

In Korea, even when money is earned, it's hard for it to truly belong to oneself. For a 1 billion won (approx. 4.47 million RMB) apartment, upon purchase, you first pay nearly 30 million won (approx. 150,000 RMB) in acquisition tax; then annual property taxes, loan interest, maintenance fees. Parents' medical insurance, nursing insurance cost 400,000-500,000 won per month. So that profit seems to be in the account, but it's already pre-spent on the house, parents, and future children. The only indulgence Seongmin dared was upgrading his 10,000 won (approx. 45 RMB) soup-and-rice lunch to 12,000 won (approx. 54 RMB).

Their imagination of when they can finally have a child is also constantly being upgraded. Initially, they just wanted to save enough for a decent jeonse rental (a Korean housing system between buying and renting, using a large lump-sum deposit for a period of "free occupancy"; in Seoul, a small jeonse deposit is about 100-300 million won, approx. 450,000-1.34 million RMB, while ordinary apartments often start at 600 million won, approx. 2.68 million RMB). Later, it became moving to a good neighborhood (dong) or a large-brand apartment. Later still, the child should attend a good kindergarten, English academy, ideally entering the elite educational track all the way, even studying abroad.

In Korea, a child's starting point isn't the delivery room, but which dong, which apartment the parents live in. Where a child lives often determines from what age they are sent into which track.

The semiconductor bull market also illuminates a finer hierarchy of status.

Taehoon is a student I tutor in Chinese. He works in equipment maintenance at a semiconductor cooperative company (up/downstream partner) for Hynix in Cheongju but isn't a formal SK Hynix employee. That dark work uniform, which used to just get dusty daily, recently gained another value. On Korean secondhand platforms, SK Hynix jackets are labeled "best blind date attire."

Taehoon also participated in a blind date arranged by his parents. The other party, hearing he was at a semiconductor-related company, quickly asked: "Is it at Hynix?" He paused and said: "It's a cooperative company, not a direct employee." The other party smiled and said: "But the semiconductor industry is good now, right?" It seems Korea's semiconductor bull market illuminated the entire industry, but the dividends aren't evenly distributed. Some are at the chaebol center, some at cooperative companies; some get huge performance bonuses, some just work more overtime; some see their company logo appreciate in the marriage market, some are just brushed by this frenzy.

This is also why many young Koreans are increasingly tense: normal upward mobility channels are narrowing, while asset markets are like doors not yet completely closed. Behind the door is dangerous, but more and more people are outside.

The most enticing part of a bull market is that it makes people think class can be rewritten by a single purchase. The most brutal part is that when the decline comes, it immediately makes class reappear.

On May 20, the Korean market began to fluctuate violently. The bull market that just days earlier felt like a festival suddenly showed another face. KOSPI fell only 0.86% on the surface, but all twenty-plus industry sectors fell, with declining stocks outnumbering advancing ones by about 9 to 1; foreign investors net sold about 2.95 trillion won in a single day. During the day, people could still say it was an adjustment, foreigners were shaking out the market; by late night, explanations gradually quieted down.

The evening of the stock market turmoil, Sookoo had dinner with a finance big brother at a Japanese restaurant in Gangnam. Before meeting such people, he would arrive in his Mercedes, Rolex showing from his sleeve. Later, after selling the Mercedes, he drove a second-hand Kia. Old steering wheel, worn-out seats, paired with that watch, seemed inappropriate, so he didn't wear it that day.

The finance big brother arrived punctually. When the second glass of wine was poured, the other asked him: "What's your take on semiconductors lately?" Sookoo picked up a small piece of sashimi; his chopsticks paused mid-air. Before, he would immediately respond, as if afraid of being forgotten by this table half a second late. But this time, he wasn't in a hurry. He dipped the sashimi in wasabi soy sauce, ate it, then put down his chopsticks.

After having money in his account again, even his silence became different.

He looked up and said: "Hyung, this time I only plan to buy in batches. Acting recklessly again would be fatal." At the end of the dinner, the finance big brother patted his shoulder and said: "Sookoo-ya, you seem to have improved this time."

Those truly hit are the ones who staked everything and can never recover. Sookoo's friend Donghyuk is one. He used to be a marketing director at a large company, living with his wife in a Gangnam apartment, driving an imported car, buying Korean beef at the supermarket on weekends. Back then, he also spoke in Kakao finance groups; people called him "Donghyuk-hyung." This "hyung" is common in Korea but carries weight. It means experience, money, judgment, and that others were willing to listen to him.

When the metaverse heated up, he believed he caught the next generation of the internet. At first, he only bought small amounts, then more and more. Each loss made him want to prove his initial judgment wasn't wrong. He used credit loans and stock collateral loans. His wife warned him: "Isn't it too risky?" He said: "Missing this cycle, I'll regret it for life."

Later, he really regretted it. The day he sold the Gangnam apartment, the agent, contract, bank, repayment—everything pushed forward like a procedure. His wife stood in the emptied living room, looking at hooks still stuck on the wall, and asked him: "How did we get to this point?" He couldn't answer. Finally, his wife said: "What's more unbearable than you losing money is you refusing to face reality."

Years later now, another bull market arrived. The person who once explained market trends at dinner tables can only deliver takeout to those offices discussing trends. In the original stock trading group, someone half-jokingly calls him "delivery hyung." The "hyung" remains, but the respect has been hollowed out.

This is the most unequal aspect of a bull market. On the surface, everyone can download a securities app, everyone can open an account, but those who can truly bear the risk of opportunity have never been everyone.

Sometimes I also see myself in such contrasts. I ride the same subway, eat similarly priced soup and rice, and also looked at the red and blue flashing numbers in the securities app on similar nights. My anxiety just takes a different shape. It's not a mortgage or debt, but another kind of uncertainty: Where should I stay? Where is my future?

Sometimes Korean friends ask me: Isn't it also very competitive over there? Speaking of China, they sometimes show a bit of envy, saying your market is big, there are still opportunities; sometimes add: "But you also work very hard, right?" Perhaps they just want to confirm whether their exhaustion is an isolated failure or a common situation this generation has reached.

It's also hard for me to separate myself because Chinese youth also break down their lives into individual beads: job, rent, parents, marriage, buying a home, children. Each bead alone doesn't seem too heavy, but once placed on that transparent template, you realize the pattern was predetermined. You think you're slowly piecing together a life, but you're just carefully not misplacing any bead.

I increasingly feel that Korean youth's "lying flat" is never about lacking desire. On the contrary, it's that their desires have been disciplined to be too quiet. It no longer appears as bold declarations but is shrunk into bills. The bull market is glaring because it briefly makes people forget this spreadsheet. It's direct, rough, tempting. Buy today, rise tomorrow, the account immediately tells you: Have you been seen by the times?

But behind this spreadsheet is actually a body that has endured too long. The suddenly restored heartbeat makes the line on the screen jump. But that jump isn't recovery. When the market quiets down, Korean youth still have to return to their original lives, continue facing that medical record.

That medical record doesn't just bear one person's name. In 2025, Korea's household net worth Gini coefficient rose to 0.625, with the top 10% richest households holding nearly half the national net worth; non-regular workers' wages were only about 65% of regular workers'. Korean society isn't moving forward together; rather, some move further away via assets, while others' labor income is pre-divided into grades. The poor feel they can't get in, the middle class fear falling. The ceiling formed by chaebols remains rock-solid.

Later I understood: the bull market replaces Koreans' weather not because people no longer care about rain. Rain falls on everyone, but the bull market doesn't.

Subway Line 2 arrives at the station as usual. Some look up at the weather; some look down at Samsung and Hynix. The doors open, then close. Some squeeze in; some are left outside.

(All names in the article are pseudonyms)

Preguntas relacionadas

QWhat are the key factors driving the 'epic bull market' in South Korea described in the article, and what are its main social impacts?

AThe bull market is primarily driven by a surge in the semiconductor sector, with companies like Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix contributing to nearly 80% of the KOSPI index's gains. The index doubled within six months in 2026. Socially, it has led to widespread speculative investing ('ant' investors), with people borrowing money to trade, quitting jobs to trade full-time, and viewing the stock market as a last chance for social mobility. It has exacerbated wealth inequality and highlighted deep-seated anxieties about stagnant wages, high living costs, and limited traditional avenues for advancement.

QAccording to the article, how does the 'epic bull market' reflect and potentially worsen social stratification and inequality in South Korea?

AThe bull market acts as a pressure test that reveals and intensifies existing social divides. While it offers an illusion of equal opportunity, in reality, access to capital, information networks (like exclusive chat rooms), and family financial support determine success. Wealthy individuals or those with connections can better navigate risks, while ordinary salaried workers or those using borrowed money face devastating losses. The article notes that the market has widened the wealth gap, making 'labor income' seem pathetic compared to investment gains and reinforcing a hierarchy where the wealthy consolidate assets while the middle class fears downward mobility.

QWhat specific financial risks and personal consequences do South Korean retail investors, particularly the young 'ant' investors, face in this market environment?

AYoung retail investors ('ant' investors) face severe risks including investing borrowed money, leveraging family savings, or using funds earmarked for essentials like housing, education, or retirement. Personal consequences extend beyond financial loss to mental health crises, family breakdowns, and in extreme cases, suicide. The article cites an example of a man who died after losing 200 million won in stocks. Investors experience intense pressure, sleep deprivation, and the social shame of failure, which can destroy relationships and self-worth.

QHow does the article use individual stories (like Minji, Junho, and Sooku) to illustrate the broader societal phenomenon and psychological state of young South Koreans?

AThe stories personalize the abstract market frenzy. Minji, a low-salaried office worker, represents the fear of missing out (FOMO) and the desperate hope for an escape from a financially constrained life. Junho, saving for marriage, embodies how the market disrupts carefully planned life milestones, making traditional saving seem futile. Sooku, an experienced trader, illustrates the performative aspects of wealth, the importance of social capital in investing circles, and how family backing can provide a crucial safety net after losses. Together, they show a generation grappling with limited opportunities, viewing the volatile stock market as a perilous but necessary gamble for a better future.

QIn the author's concluding analysis, what is the fundamental societal problem in South Korea that the stock market boom is merely a symptom of?

AThe fundamental problem is a rigid social structure with narrowing avenues for upward mobility. The bull market is a symptom of deep-seated issues like extreme wealth concentration (with the top 10% holding nearly half the national assets), a significant wage gap between regular and irregular workers, high costs of living (housing, education, weddings), and the immense pressure of predefined life scripts (career, marriage, home ownership). The market offers a tantalizing but risky shortcut, distracting from a 'medical chart' of systemic social ills where ordinary labor is undervalued and the wealth gap is cemented by chaebol dominance.

Lecturas Relacionadas

La empresaria del 'mundo cripto' evitó el colapso de las minas y el desplome de precios, pero pagó 60 millones por una estafa tipo 'matadero de cerdos' en EE.UU.

**Una empresaria china de criptomonedas fue estafada con 94 millones de dólares en Estados Unidos** Fiona Lyu, una empresaria china de 40 años, fundadora de Valarhash y operadora de dos pools de minería de Bitcoin (1THash y Bytepool), perdió más de 94 millones de dólares en una estafa de inversión en Estados Unidos. El caso, revelado por el medio chino Caixin, involucró a dos hermanos estadounidenses, Zubair y Muzamil Al Zubair, quienes se hicieron pasar por miembros de la realeza de Oriente Medio y un gestor de fondos de cobertura para engañarla. Lyu, cuya empresa llegó a controlar alrededor del 9% de la tasa de hash global de Bitcoin en su apogeo (2020), se vio obligada a trasladar sus operaciones de minería al extranjero en 2021 tras la prohibición de esta actividad en China. Buscando establecerse en Ohio, fue contactada por los estafadores. Estos organizaron una falsa ceremonia de firma de contrato en el ayuntamiento de East Cleveland en agosto de 2021, sobornando a un asistente del alcalde para darle credibilidad. Tras una transferencia inicial, Lyu desarrolló una relación personal cercana con Zubair, lo que, según la fiscalía, era parte del modus operandi para evitar sospechas. Además del dinero del contrato, los estafadores se apropiaron y vendieron 1,067 de sus máquinas mineras. En mayo de 2026, los hermanos fueron condenados a 24 y 23 años de prisión, respectivamente. Paralelamente, en China, Lyu enfrentaba una demanda de una empresa que buscaba anular un contrato de minería y recuperar 1.93 millones de dólares, argumentando su ilegalidad tras la prohibición. Los tribunales fallaron en su contra. Estos reveses simultáneos marcaron un dramático descenso para la anteriormente poderosa "reina de la minería".

Foresight NewsHace 4 min(s)

La empresaria del 'mundo cripto' evitó el colapso de las minas y el desplome de precios, pero pagó 60 millones por una estafa tipo 'matadero de cerdos' en EE.UU.

Foresight NewsHace 4 min(s)

El caso de precios de Trade.xyz expone una vulnerabilidad fatal en los contratos perpetuos Pre-IPO

La plataforma Trade.xyz, que opera en Hyperliquid, enfrenta una crisis de confianza debido a la polémica sobre su contrato perpetuo pre-IPO de SpaceX (SPCX). Tras la actualización del número de acciones en circulación de SpaceX en su prospecto, que redujo teóricamente el precio por acción en un 10%, la mayoría de los exchanges centralizados (CEX) pausaron y reajustaron sus contratos. Sin embargo, Trade.xyz mantuvo su precio, argumentando que su contrato "IPOP" rastrea las expectativas de mercado sobre el precio por acción, no la valoración total de la empresa basada en acciones o capitalización de mercado. Esta discrepancia generó oportunidades de arbitraje y provocó pérdidas significativas para los holders largos, cuyas posiciones con alto apalancamiento sufrieron liquidaciones. Los usuarios critican la falta de claridad inicial en las reglas del producto y la respuesta tardía de la plataforma, que no ofreció compensaciones. El incidente subraya un desafío clave para los Perpetual DEX (Perp DEX) que cotizan activos pre-IPO: la falta de un mecanismo nativo de "Rebase". Este mecanismo, común en los CEX, ajusta de forma neutral el precio del contrato y el tamaño de la posición cuando cambian datos fundamentales (como recuento de acciones), evitando pérdidas injustas para un lado del mercado. Implementar Rebase en un entorno descentralizado es técnicamente complejo y costoso, ya que requiere modificar contratos inteligentes y puede fragmentar la liquidez. Aunque algunos DEX han logrado implementaciones similares, el caso de Trade.xyz expone las dificultades de los Perp DEX para manejar eventos corporativos reales y pone a prueba la viabilidad de los contratos perpetuos pre-IPO en la cadena como mecanismos confiables de descubrimiento de precios para activos del mundo real (RWA).

链捕手Hace 19 min(s)

El caso de precios de Trade.xyz expone una vulnerabilidad fatal en los contratos perpetuos Pre-IPO

链捕手Hace 19 min(s)

Informe Semanal de Perspectivas de Inversión en Mercados Primarios de Criptomonedas | Regulación de Stablecoins Próxima a Implementarse, ETFs Experimentan Salidas Continuas de Fondos, Capital Comienza a Apostar por Pagos y Flujos de Efectivo

**Informe Semanal: Perspectivas de Inversión en Cripto (1-7 Junio 2026)** **Conclusiones clave:** Los mercados de cripto muestran una divergencia clara. Los ETF de BTC y ETH registran salidas netas récord (17.200 M$ y 168 M$, respectivamente), indicando una reducción de la exposición al riesgo por parte de los inversores institucionales. Sin embargo, la capitalización total de las stablecoins sigue creciendo (hasta 325.400 M$), lo que sugiere que el capital permanece en la cadena, migrando hacia infraestructuras de pago y rendimiento. **Tendencias de financiación:** El capital de riesgo se concentra en tres áreas principales, que suman el 72% del volumen total (302 M$): 1. **Infraestructura de Stablecoins (28%):** Enfoque en redes de pago y liquidación, impulsado por un marco regulatorio más claro (ej. GENIUS Act en EE.UU.). Proyectos destacados: M0 Protocol, Ethena. 2. **Infraestructura para Agentes de IA (26%):** La inversión pasa de la narrativa a la economía real de agentes, priorizando redes de ejecución e identidad. Proyectos destacados: Halliday, OpenRouter. 3. **RWA (Activos del Mundo Real) (18%):** Búsqueda de activos con flujos de caja reales en cadena. Proyectos destacados: Ondo Finance, Plume Network. **Perspectiva y riesgos:** La tendencia marca un cambio hacia protocolos que generan ingresos reales y tienen capacidad de pago, frente a aquellos basados solo en narrativas. Los eventos de seguridad evolucionan hacia riesgos de gestión de claves y control de permisos, como se vio en incidentes de Gravity Bridge y DxSale. **Próximos puntos de observación (30 días):** Avances en la regulación (GENIUS Act, CLARITY Act), reunión de la FED en junio, y lanzamientos de tokens (TGE) de proyectos como GRVT e Initia.

marsbitHace 35 min(s)

Informe Semanal de Perspectivas de Inversión en Mercados Primarios de Criptomonedas | Regulación de Stablecoins Próxima a Implementarse, ETFs Experimentan Salidas Continuas de Fondos, Capital Comienza a Apostar por Pagos y Flujos de Efectivo

marsbitHace 35 min(s)

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Cómo comprar EPIC

¡Bienvenido a HTX.com! Hemos hecho que comprar Epic Chain (EPIC) sea simple y conveniente. Sigue nuestra guía paso a paso para iniciar tu viaje de criptos.Paso 1: crea tu cuenta HTXUtiliza tu correo electrónico o número de teléfono para registrarte y obtener una cuenta gratuita en HTX. Experimenta un proceso de registro sin complicaciones y desbloquea todas las funciones.Obtener mi cuentaPaso 2: ve a Comprar cripto y elige tu método de pagoTarjeta de crédito/débito: usa tu Visa o Mastercard para comprar Epic Chain (EPIC) al instante.Saldo: utiliza fondos del saldo de tu cuenta HTX para tradear sin problemas.Terceros: hemos agregado métodos de pago populares como Google Pay y Apple Pay para mejorar la comodidad.P2P: tradear directamente con otros usuarios en HTX.Over-the-Counter (OTC): ofrecemos servicios personalizados y tipos de cambio competitivos para los traders.Paso 3: guarda tu Epic Chain (EPIC)Después de comprar tu Epic Chain (EPIC), guárdalo en tu cuenta HTX. Alternativamente, puedes enviarlo a otro lugar mediante transferencia blockchain o utilizarlo para tradear otras criptomonedas.Paso 4: tradear Epic Chain (EPIC)Tradear fácilmente con Epic Chain (EPIC) en HTX's mercado spot. Simplemente accede a tu cuenta, selecciona tu par de trading, ejecuta tus trades y monitorea en tiempo real. Ofrecemos una experiencia fácil de usar tanto para principiantes como para traders experimentados.

202 Vistas totalesPublicado en 2025.03.17Actualizado en 2026.06.02

Cómo comprar EPIC

Discusiones

Bienvenido a la comunidad de HTX. Aquí puedes mantenerte informado sobre los últimos desarrollos de la plataforma y acceder a análisis profesionales del mercado. A continuación se presentan las opiniones de los usuarios sobre el precio de EPIC (EPIC).

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