Young South Koreans, Making a 'Last-Ditch Effort' in an Epic Bull Market

链捕手Published on 2026-06-11Last updated on 2026-06-11

Abstract

This article explores how an unprecedented stock market boom in South Korea during the first half of 2026, driven by the semiconductor industry, is transforming the lives of ordinary people, particularly the youth. The KOSPI index doubled in six months, fueled by giants Samsung and SK Hynix, leading to a frenzy of retail investing. With over 105 million stock accounts in a population of just over 50 million, a sense of "FOMO" (fear of missing out) is pervasive. Through the perspective of Li Yuning, a Chinese woman living in Seoul, the piece follows several young Koreans who see the market as a last chance to escape stifling economic pressures, high housing costs, and narrow social mobility. Individuals like Minji, a low-paid office worker, and Junho, saving for marriage, invest their limited savings, while experienced traders like Suhu navigate exclusive social circles. The narrative reveals that this speculative fever stems less from greed and more from deep-seated anxiety about being left behind in a society with growing wealth inequality and rigid class structures. However, the boom also exposes stark social divides. It exacerbates wealth gaps, as those with family support or existing capital fare better. The pressure to succeed is immense, with stories of devastating losses leading to personal tragedy. Ultimately, the article suggests the牛市 acts as a pressure valve and a temporary illusion of opportunity in a system where traditional paths to advancement seem increasing...

Original Text: Li Yuning, Meiri Renwu

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

South Korea's total population is just over 50 million, yet the number of securities accounts has surpassed 105 million. On average, each person holds two stock accounts. The fervor for stock trading among the public has reached unprecedented heights, with borrowing to invest hitting new records and the attendant risks intensifying.

People who once focused solely on work and life have now entered the market. Some have quit their jobs to trade full-time, while others monitor the markets obsessively at their desks or during their commutes. Stocks have transformed from mere investments into topics that dictate one's fate, a common subject of conversation. Countless young South Koreans view the stock market as a final chance to break through their current circumstances and turn their lives around, driven by a fear of being left behind by the times.

This article, from the perspective of a Chinese person living in South Korea, interviews ordinary investors of different backgrounds. Looking beyond the frenzied surface of the stock market, it interprets the survival anxieties, class predicaments behind South Korean youth's deep involvement in this bull market, and the latent societal concerns underlying this nationwide speculative fever. Enjoy:

Li Yuning is a Chinese woman living in Seoul. In 2022, she quit her job in China to study Korean in South Korea and pursue a PhD. After graduation, she stayed to work at a research institute. For a long time, her life was far removed from the stock market: checking emails in the morning, writing reports during the day, and having dinner with friends in the evening.

It wasn't until the beginning of this year that she finally opened her first Korean stock trading account. Identity verification, account linking, and trading agreements popped up on her phone screen one after another. The red and blue numbers that followed became the code that has 'dominated' the fate of South 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 South Korea's national destiny to the semiconductor cycle. The KOSPI (Korea Composite Stock Price Index) completed a doubling leap from the 4000-point range to the 8000-point range within six months, with nearly 80% of the gains contributed by just two companies: Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix.

Especially since this spring, friends have started frequently discussing Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, and US market closings. Before, they talked about stocks like it was a technical skill; later, they talked about them like they were discussing fate. Some people took leave to watch the markets, others refreshed their accounts in the bathroom, and some even quit their jobs because of KOSPI's rise to become full-time investors at home. They no longer said they were unemployed; instead, they said they had finally 'escaped their salary.'

One of Li Yuning's friends originally worked in project management at a trading company in Gangnam. Last year, she was complaining about a small year-end bonus. A few days ago, she suddenly posted a picture of a sports car's steering wheel in a group chat with just one line: "하닉이 사준 차." (The car Hynix bought for me). A hidden form of comparison was laid bare on the table: Why can someone, working the same hours, pulling the same overtime, leave years of someone else's salary in the dust with just a few purchases?

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

Thus, the stock market has forcefully entered the lives of ordinary people ahead of schedule. But when the money comes from loans, mortgages, parents' retirement savings, or children's education funds, a loss is no longer just shrinking numbers. It becomes sleepless nights, unanswered phone calls, and a body that sits at the office the next day unable to work.

In December 2025, in Yongin, 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 were never just numbers on a screen. They are connected to debt, marriage, parents' nest eggs, and determine whether a person can still 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 South Korean youth behind the market. She specifically met with her South Korean friends to talk about how this bull market is currently repricing the lives of ordinary people.

"Young 'ants' are putting their limited chips on the table, as if this is the last chance to turn their fortunes around. After all, things can't get much worse."

The following is her account:

01 A Nation of Stock Traders

To wake up early to watch the market, South Koreans have further 'evolved' their sleep away. The South Korean morning, which used to start with checking the weather, now begins with opening a stock trading app.

This is a bull market that makes ordinary people stake their 'fate.' As of early June, the KOSPI index's year-to-date gain exceeded 108%, surpassing the Nasdaq 100's gain during the 1999 internet bubble and even South Korea's historical peak during the industrial boom of the late 1980s. The total market capitalization of listed South Korean companies surged by 86% this year to around $5 trillion, making it the world's sixth-largest stock market.

By early May, the number of South Korean securities accounts had already exceeded 105 million, more than double the total population. On May 27th, the Korea Exchange launched its first-ever single-stock leveraged ETFs, initially tracking the two core Korean tech stocks: Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix. These products carry high leverage risks, so regulators mandated that buyers must first complete an online 'risk' education course. On the day the ETFs were launched, the educational website crashed briefly under the traffic. Thus, through Samsung and Hynix, the stock market barged into the commutes, lunch breaks, group chats, and family ledgers of ordinary people.

Minji is one of the young people who opened an account during this frenzy. I met Minji during a part-time job. She is 29, from Gyeongsangbuk-do. That region is somewhat like South Korea's 'old industrial northeast': factories, ports, silent parents, and fewer and fewer young people. After graduation, she came to Seoul to work as a planner at an advertising agency. The job sounds decent, but after insurance and taxes, she takes home only 2.8 million won per month (about 13,000 RMB). After rent, transportation, food, and phone bills, the remaining money is blown away by the wind.

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

If nothing unexpected happens, Minji would endure a few years at the ad agency, with her salary slowly increasing; then marry an ordinary office worker, pooling savings, parental support, and bank loans to move to an apartment on the outskirts of Seoul or in a new city in Gyeonggi-do. It seems she has finally moved from the provinces to Seoul, from a semi-basement to above ground, from monthly rent to owning an apartment. But in essence, it's just exchanging rent to a landlord when young for mortgage interest to a bank in middle age. The so-called stability is just a more respectable name for insecurity.

It was precisely when this path seemed to be narrowing that the stock market barged into her life. It is dangerous, yet it seems more like an exit than the life dictated by salary and rent. When the Seoul Subway Line 2 pulls into Sillim Station, she gets pushed onto the train by the crowd. Before, on the train, she would first check KakaoTalk (South Korea's 'WeChat'); now, she opens her stock trading app first. When she first bought just two shares, she felt a little embarrassed, as if she was imitating others getting rich. But compared to the fear of losing money, she is more afraid that years from now, when people talk about this semiconductor bull market, she will have to say again, like she did about missing the property boom, the cryptocurrency bubble, or the AI-driven U.S. stock rally led by Nvidia: "I didn't buy back then."

Compared to single white-collar workers with only themselves to worry about, families are often more cautious when it comes to stock trading.

Junho is the boyfriend of a senior I knew from university, aged 33. They have been out of school for three years but still haven't married. He commutes daily from Incheon to Yeouido for work; his salary isn't low. He keeps an Excel spreadsheet with his saved jeonse deposit, wedding budget, and his parents' medical emergency fund. In South Korea, an ordinary wedding, with venue, banquet, wedding dress, and makeup, easily costs around 30 million won (about 150,000 RMB). Add the jeonse deposit for a newlywed home, and marriage immediately becomes a ledger of hundreds of millions of won. Junho wants to get married, but that spreadsheet isn't filled out yet. He used to believe that as long as he filled it in cell by cell, life would move forward. But after this bull market arrived, he felt for the first time that the spreadsheet calculations were too slow. He only dipped his toes in with a small amount because the stock price was already high when he entered.

"Is it too late now?" is the "FOMO" (Fear of Missing Out) sentiment hanging over ordinary South Koreans. Eunju, the receptionist at a dermatology clinic I frequent, quit her job after her child was born. In her moms' chat group, topics that used to be about English academies and pediatricians have recently turned entirely to stocks. Eunju is also itching to get in, but she thinks first of the family ledger. That money seems to be in the account, but its position has long been assigned to the lives of her child, husband, and parents. She hesitates to take the plunge.

Among all my friends, Su-kyu has been the most elated during this bull market. As an experienced investor, he is the type who long ago made the stock market a second life, watching financial news on the treadmill and opening his trading app after finishing his workout. Since this recent semiconductor bull market began, he often semi-jokingly messages me: "Made 20 million won today across three accounts (about 90,000 RMB), I'll treat you to Korean BBQ tonight." Sometimes he says: "Lost a Ferrari today." This sounds exaggerated, but it's like a new language in this bull market: talking about losses in terms of sports cars also means he has regained the right to speak in a certain way.

His father's and sister's funds are also given to him to invest. This is not just Su-kyu's story. In this Korean bull market, more and more young people are not only using their own savings but also borrowing family funds to buy stocks, and even directly taking loans from securities firms to enter the market. Korean media cited statistics from the Korea Financial Investment Association showing that as of April this year, the daily average scale of 'borrowing to invest' had risen to about 33.8 trillion won, hitting a monthly historical high. By May 21st, the overall margin trading balance in South Korea had climbed to 36 trillion won. What's rising is the stock price; what's being staked is ordinary people's prematurely tapped credit and future.

These madly rushing South Korean retail investors are called 'ants,' with young retail investors called 'youth ants.' This term carries a subtle sense of fate. Ants are too small, they can only crawl close to the ground, carrying a bit of capital, judgment, and luck within the huge financial market. Yet, they still surge into this army one after another. Not because they all believe they can beat the market, but because they know staying put is equally dangerous.

02 The Bull Market is Widening Wealth and Class Gaps in South Korea

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 would be strange not to. But in the end, what truly weighs on their minds often isn't greed, but a sense of absence.

This is how Minji started buying stocks. She doesn't understand financial reports or can't clearly explain semiconductor cycles. She just knows HBM (High Bandwidth Memory) is hot, SK Hynix is rising fast, and everyone in the group is saying 'it's not too late.' One night, she met a university friend in Hongdae. As soon as the friend sat down, she opened her stock trading app to show Minji, saying the Hynix stock she bought last year had already risen a lot. The friend said it lightly: "Just bought a little randomly, didn't expect it to go up like this." Minji also smiled and said, "That's great." On the way home that day, she stood 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 'bought a little randomly.' For some people, 'random' is another person's 'too late.'

In South Korea's workplaces, 'salary poverty' is becoming a topic. 'Lately, it's not people who are working, it's stocks that are working.' 'Labor income has become a beggar in the bull market.' Even without fantasies of overnight riches, ordinary people saving money step by step from their salaries have also become 'pitiable.'

Junho realizes the life order he's been diligently building is being challenged. He's still trying hard to live, yet suddenly feels poor. This 'suddenly feeling poor' isn't about actually going bankrupt, but the frame of reference has changed. His girlfriend sometimes says: "You should learn about investing too. Others bought Hynix and earned a whole deposit in a few months." Before, Junho compared himself to others based on salary, position, and years of experience; now, he is forced to compare holdings, entry timing, and account returns.

The stay-at-home mom Eunju hasn't truly entered the market, so she hasn't suffered actual losses, yet she gradually feels a gap opening up with others. Once, someone in the moms' chat group said that after making money in stocks, she was planning to switch her child to a more expensive English academy. Eunju's child is still at the current ordinary cram school. The teacher is very responsible, grades homework carefully. But when the moms' group mentions the teacher, they always lightly add: "The person is responsible, it's just their academic background is ordinary." In the South Korean education market, whether a teacher is a graduate of SKY (an acronym for Seoul National University, Korea University, and Yonsei University), has overseas experience, or speaks with a 'native speaker' accent all become price tags in parents' eyes. And the bull market has widened the distance between children who were once at the same starting line.

The stock market itself is a metaphor for social circles. Su-kyu understands better than anyone that in South Korea, trading stocks sometimes isn't just about opening an app and placing an order. It also involves joining groups, reading reports, maintaining relationships, treating to meals, giving gifts, and even learning to discern at the dinner table which words are genuine information and which are just someone wanting you to take over their position.

A few years ago, he was just a small fish in a Kakao Finance group. The group name was 'Market Study Room,' sounding like an ordinary study group, but it was actually more like a small-scale class club: former securities firm employees, asset managers, seasoned investors, and a few people like himself trying to climb up.

Every morning at 8:30, the group would become active. Some posted U.S. market closes, some posted institutional reports, some screenshot foreign investment flows. Whoever made accurate calls, got information quickly, or still had capital had a voice. Whoever kept losing money, whose messages went unanswered, would eventually fade away and 'be' removed from the group. Many such trading groups operate, filter, and narrow in South Korea, much like the continual narrowing of upward social mobility.

Su-kyu being looked after by a 'finance hyung' (older brother/friend) wasn't due to a single call but from long-term relationship maintenance. He would often visit seniors in different cities, book restaurants, ask Chinese friends to bring Maotai liquor. When the market was good, dinners were like information exchanges; when the market was bad, dinners were like relationship insurance. Before, when Su-kyu's Mercedes-Benz was parked in front of a Japanese restaurant, his Rolex peeking out from his cuff, and the finance hyung got into the passenger seat, he would have the 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 has weight, jokes get responses, opinions get heard; when an account lightens, the person also becomes lighter.

The bull market has produced many sensational stories: screenshots of gains, quitting jobs, sports car photos. People seem to finally hold their heads high, boldly announcing they want to sever ties with their formerly humbly managed lives, to transform from 'people who work jobs' to 'people who choose their lives.'

Some South Koreans I know, after making money in the stock market, have indeed quit their jobs, even including some who handed in their civil servant IDs. The basic salary for a junior South Korean civil servant is around 2.13 million won (about 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, cost of living, and class anxiety, is often just a bowl that won't shatter but also can't hold enough rice. So, the sudden extra sum in their account isn't just profit for them; it's a ticket to escape their original track. Some trade full-time; some went to Vietnam with money earned from stocks to start a new life.

03 The Class Illusion Exposed by the Bull Market: Opportunity is Not Equal for All

If you only look at the accounts, the South Korean bull market seems like an opportunity; if you look at the lives behind the accounts, it's more like a stress test. Stocks begin to re-examine everyone's life: salary, debt, children, parents, housing, and marriage are all laid back on the table for reassessment.

In 2022, after the previous metaverse bubble in South Korea burst, Su-kyu also sold his Mercedes to repay loans. The day he sold the car, he washed it spotlessly, even beating the floor mats a few times. After the deal was done, 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 the point where you can no longer drive to meet friends, can no longer casually treat others to meals.

But even at his lowest point, 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 that upward-moving life never truly belonged to me."

Fortunately, in this bull market, with his family providing a safety net, Su-kyu turned things around. His father helped settle some high-interest debt and gave him another sum of money. With three family accounts combined, Su-kyu regained the capital to re-enter the market and the confidence to sit back at the dinner table.

The stock market creates an 'illusion' of class mobility for ordinary people. A friend of a friend, Sung-min, 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 screenshots, she said: "In that case, let's take an overseas trip?" Sung-min immediately replied: "No, I haven't sold yet, and there's tax to consider, plus we need to think about parents' insurance premiums."

In South Korea, even when money is earned, it's hard for it to truly belong to oneself. For a 1 billion won apartment (about 4.47 million RMB), you first pay nearly 30 million won (about 150,000 RMB) in acquisition tax upon purchase; then annual property taxes, loan interest, and maintenance fees follow. Parents' medical insurance, long-term care insurance cost another 400,000-500,000 won per month. So that profit seems to be in the account, but it's already earmarked for housing, parents, and future children. The only indulgence Sung-min dared was upgrading his 10,000 won lunchtime soup (about 45 RMB) to a 12,000 won one (about 54 RMB).

Their vision of when they can finally have children is also constantly being upgraded. Initially, they just wanted to save enough for a decent jeonse apartment (a housing system in South Korea between buying and renting, using a large lump-sum deposit for 'free' occupancy for a period; in Seoul, a small jeonse deposit is roughly 100-300 million won, about 450,000-1.34 million RMB, while an ordinary apartment often starts at 600 million won, about 2.68 million RMB). Later, it became moving to a good neighborhood (dong), a branded apartment complex. Later still, it was about children attending good kindergartens, English academies, ideally entering the elite education track all the way, even studying abroad.

In South Korea, a child's starting point isn't the delivery room, but which neighborhood (dong) and which apartment building their parents live in. Where a child lives often determines from what age they are sent onto which track.

The semiconductor bull market also illuminates an even more detailed social hierarchy.

Tae-hoon is a student I tutor in Chinese. He works in equipment maintenance at a Hynix semiconductor partner company (upstream/downstream cooperative firm) in Cheongju but is not a regular employee of SK Hynix. That dark work uniform, which used to just get dusty daily, recently acquired a different kind of value. On South Korean second-hand platforms, SK Hynix jackets are labeled 'Best Dating Outfit.'

Tae-hoon also attended a matchmaking meeting arranged by his parents. The other party, hearing he worked in a semiconductor-related company, quickly asked: "Is it with Hynix?" He paused and said: "It's a partner company, not a direct employee." The other person smiled and said: "But the semiconductor industry is doing well these days, right?" It seems the South Korean semiconductor bull market has illuminated the entire industry, but the benefits aren't distributed equally. Some are at the center of the chaebols, some are in partner companies; some receive huge performance bonuses, others just work more overtime; some see their company logo appreciate in the marriage market, others are merely brushed by the edge of this frenzy.

This is also the root of why many South Korean young people are feeling increasingly tense: normal upward mobility channels are narrowing, while asset markets seem like one of the few doors not yet completely closed. It's dangerous behind the door, but more and more people are left outside.

The most enchanting aspect of a bull market is that it makes people believe social class can be rewritten with a single purchase. The most brutal aspect of a bull market is that when the downturn comes, it immediately makes class distinctions reappear.

On May 20th, the South Korean market began experiencing severe volatility. The bull market, which just days before felt like a festival, suddenly showed another face. The KOSPI surface only fell 0.86%, but over twenty industry sectors fell across the board, with the number of declining stocks about nine times that of advancing ones; foreign investors net sold about 2.95 trillion won in a single day. During the day, people could still call it a correction, foreigners shaking out weak hands; by late night, the explanations gradually quieted down.

On the night of the market turbulence, Su-kyu had dinner with a finance hyung at a Japanese restaurant in Gangnam. Before meeting such people, he would drive his Mercedes, his Rolex peeking from his cuff. Later, after selling the Mercedes, he drove a second-hand Kia. The old steering wheel, worn seat, paired with that watch felt mismatched, so that day he didn't wear it.

The finance hyung arrived on time. When the wine was poured for the second time, the other asked him: "What's your take on semiconductors lately?" Su-kyu picked up a small piece of sashimi, his chopsticks pausing mid-air. Before, he would have immediately replied, afraid that being half a second late would mean being forgotten by this table. But this time, he wasn't in a hurry. He dipped the fish into wasabi soy sauce, ate it, then put down his chopsticks.

After having money back in his account, even his silence felt different.

He looked up and said: "Hyung, this time I only plan to buy in batches. If I mess around again, I'll die." At the end of the dinner, the finance hyung patted his shoulder and said: "Su-kyu, you seem to be doing well this time."

Those truly hit are the ones who staked everything and can never recover. Su-kyu's friend Dong-hyuk is one of them. He used to be a marketing manager 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 'Dong-hyuk hyung.' This 'hyung' is common in South Korea but carries weight. It implies experience, money, judgment, and that others are willing to listen to him.

When the metaverse craze took off, he believed he had caught the next generation of the internet. At first, he only bought small amounts, then bought more and more. Each loss made him want to prove even more that his initial choice wasn't wrong. He used credit loans and also stock collateral loans. His wife warned him: "Isn't this too risky?" He said: "If I miss this cycle, I'll regret it for a lifetime."

Later, he truly regretted it. The day he sold the Gangnam apartment, the agent, contract, bank, repayment—everything proceeded like a process. His wife stood in the now-empty living room, looking at the hooks still barely stuck on the wall, and asked him: "How did we end up here?" He couldn't answer. Finally, his wife said: "More than you losing money, what I can't bear is you refusing to face reality."

Now, years later, another bull market has arrived. The person who once explained market trends at the dinner table can now only deliver takeout to those offices discussing trends. In the old trading group, someone semi-jokingly calls him 'delivery hyung.' The 'hyung' suffix 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 trading app, everyone can open an account. But the people 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 have also watched the red and blue jumping numbers in my trading 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, my South Korean friends ask me, isn't it also very competitive over there? When talking about China, they sometimes sound a bit envious, saying your market is big, there are still many opportunities; sometimes they add: "But you must also have it tough, right?" Perhaps they just want to confirm whether their exhaustion is an isolated failure or a common plight this generation has reached.

It's also hard for me to separate myself, because young Chinese people 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 has long been predetermined. You think you are slowly piecing together a life, but you are actually carefully not misplacing a single bead.

I increasingly feel that South Korean young people's 'lying flat' is never about lacking desire. On the contrary, it's that their desires have been disciplined into silence. They no longer appear as bold declarations but are shrunken into bills. And the bull market is glaring because it briefly makes people forget this spreadsheet. It's direct, crude, tempting. Buy today, rise tomorrow; the account immediately tells you: have you been seen by the times?

But behind this spreadsheet is a body that has endured for too long. The sudden resumption of a heartbeat causes a blip on the screen. But that blip isn't recovery. When the market quiets down, South Korean young people must still return to their original lives, continuing to face that medical chart.

That medical chart doesn't bear just one person's name. In 2025, South Korea's household net worth Gini coefficient rose to 0.625, with the wealthiest 10% of households holding nearly half of the national net worth; non-regular workers' wages were only about 65% of regular workers'. South Korean society isn't moving forward together; some move farther away on assets, while others have their labor income pre-divided into grades. The poor feel they can't get in, the middle class fears falling out. But the ceiling formed by the chaebols remains impenetrable.

Later, I understood: the bull market has replaced the weather for South Koreans not because people no longer care about rain. Rain falls on everyone, but a bull market does not.

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

(All names in the article are pseudonyms)

Related Questions

QWhat is the main reason for the unprecedented surge in stock market participation among young Koreans described in the article?

AThe primary reason is deep-seated economic anxiety and a sense of desperation for social mobility. Young Koreans, facing a narrow traditional career path, high living costs, immense pressure for housing and education, and stark wealth inequality, view the stock market (particularly the semiconductor-led bull run) as one of the last remaining chances to radically improve their financial situation and escape what they perceive as a predetermined, financially strained life trajectory.

QAccording to the article, what are the two core companies driving the Korean stock market boom, and why are they significant?

AThe two core companies are Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix. They are significant because they are at the heart of the global semiconductor cycle, particularly in high-demand areas like HBM (High Bandwidth Memory). The article states that nearly 80% of the KOSPI index's surge was contributed by these two tech giants, effectively tying the nation's economic fortunes and the stock market's performance to the success of its chip industry.

QWhat does the term 'ant' (or 'youth ant') symbolize in the context of the article?

AThe term 'ant' symbolizes the Korean retail investors, particularly the young ones, who are small in individual capital but vast in number. It reflects their position in the financial ecosystem: they are seen as tiny, hardworking entities carrying their limited savings into the massive market, often moving in swarms driven by collective sentiment. The metaphor underscores their perceived powerlessness against larger market forces and the high-risk, all-in nature of their participation as a 'last resort'.

QHow does the article illustrate that the bull market is actually widening social and wealth gaps in Korea?

AThe article illustrates this in several ways: 1) It creates new hierarchies based on investment success, making salaried workers feel like 'paupers'. 2) It shows that access to profitable information and networks (like exclusive Kakao chat rooms) is itself a form of privilege. 3) It highlights that those with family financial backing (like Sugu) can recover from losses, while those who bet everything (like Donghyuk) can be ruined entirely, losing assets and social status. 4) It points out that even within the celebrated semiconductor industry, benefits are unevenly distributed between direct employees of giants like SK Hynix and workers at subcontractors.

QWhat broader social issues in Korea does the stock market frenzy reveal, beyond just financial speculation?

AThe frenzy reveals chronic issues such as severe wealth inequality (with a high Gini coefficient), a rigid social hierarchy dominated by conglomerates (chaebols), a lack of satisfying upward mobility through traditional work, intense pressure related to housing (especially the 'jeonse' system), marriage costs, and hyper-competitive education for children. The market acts as a pressure valve and a mirror, reflecting a deep-seated 'FOMO' (Fear Of Missing Out) and the anxiety of a generation that feels the normal paths to a stable, dignified life are closing.

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Two brothers who posed as "Middle Eastern princes" have been sentenced in the United States to 24 and 23 years in prison, respectively, and ordered to pay over $21.2 million in restitution and back taxes. Over three years, they fraudulently obtained approximately $21 million, primarily by promoting fictitious investment projects, including a non-existent cryptocurrency mining operation in a former General Electric industrial park in East Cleveland. The brothers, aged 42 and 33, created elaborate personas: one claimed to be a wealthy royal family heir and the city's "International Economic Advisor," while the other posed as a hedge fund manager with expertise from watching the TV show *Billions*. They bolstered their image by renting luxury cars and private jets and cultivating a relationship with a local mayor's chief of staff, who provided official-looking documents and government event access. A significant portion of the victims' funds, about $18 million, came from a single Chinese investor, a woman from Sichuan with experience in Bitcoin mining. The brothers also defrauded several women, including one former girlfriend. Their scheme unraveled when the primary investor discovered her $6 million worth of mining equipment had been sold off. The case highlights a trend of impostors using fabricated "Middle Eastern royal" identities to target wealthy individuals. Similar incidents include a "Dubai prince" who recently promoted a $500 million family office in Hong Kong and a Colombian man who impersonated a Saudi prince for decades in the US before being caught and sentenced in 2019.

marsbit5m ago

The 'Middle Eastern Prince' Swindles a Wealthy Woman: Renting Planes and Rolls-Royces, Scamming 120 Million Over Three Years

marsbit5m ago

a16z Partner: Being in the Flow of Capital Is the True Moat

A16z Partner: Standing in the Cash Flow is the True Moat Historically, many of the strongest companies built their moats by positioning themselves within "cash flows"—facilitating value creation and transfer in a network and taking a cut. The more value flows, the larger they grow. Crypto is the first modern technology natively built for this. With open ledgers, programmable settlement, and stablecoins enabling internet-speed global value transfer, it allows startups to inherit network effects from day one. Well-designed tokens align users, developers, and the protocol towards network growth, distributing value to contributors. This model isn't new (e.g., railroads, Visa, Google, AWS) but Crypto democratizes it. It lets entrepreneurs target areas with high inefficiency and profit extraction—like traditional finance's payments, custody, FX, and settlement—to compress costs, increase speed, and redistribute value by standing in the new flow. The opportunity extends beyond finance to emerging markets like GPU/compute, AI training data, energy, and space, where new, programmable infrastructure can be built without legacy constraints. Key questions for founders: Are you already in the cash flow? Does your revenue scale 10x with network activity? Where is profit extraction highest relative to value created in your market? The strategy is clear: compress the old cost structure, position yourself in the new value stream, and let the network compound.

marsbit32m ago

a16z Partner: Being in the Flow of Capital Is the True Moat

marsbit32m ago

Capturing 15 Top-Tier Zero-Day Vulnerabilities: A Consensus Protocol Debug Agent Framework Built by 0G Lab in Collaboration with Teams from NUS, PKU, and BUPT

"Agents Capture 15 Critical Zero-Day Bugs: 0G Lab's Multi-Agent Framework Automates Debugging in Consensus Protocols" Distributed consensus protocols are notoriously difficult to debug due to complex, intertwined states. A novel framework, Agora, developed by 0G Labs with researchers from NUS, Peking University, and Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, tackles this by fusing deep domain expertise with a collaborative multi-agent LLM architecture. Agora moves beyond the limitations of single LLMs and traditional testing like fuzzing. It employs three specialized agents: an Orchestrator for global state, a Strategy agent for generating attack scenarios using distributed systems knowledge, and a TestGen agent that creates executable tests. A core innovation is its efficient "Succinct Memory & Communication" mechanism and a dynamic test harness. This allows the system to translate abstract hypotheses into concrete tests across languages like Go and Rust, run them, capture failures, and refine the approach in a closed loop—all with minimal token overhead. In rigorous evaluations on production-level protocols including Raft, EPaxos, and components from etcd and Sui, Agora discovered 15 previously unknown deep logic bugs (e.g., execution divergence, liveness violations). In stark contrast, powerful standalone LLMs like GPT-5.2 and Claude 4.5 found zero such bugs. Agora achieved this with a high precision of 73.9% and at an average cost of only about $40 per bug found. The framework demonstrates high generalizability. Its decoupled design allows the "Multi-Agent + Hypothesis-Driven Testing" paradigm to be applied to other complex domains like database concurrency control, OS kernels, and Web3 smart contract auditing. By enabling efficient, automated detection of deep logic flaws, Agora points the way for AI-powered security in critical infrastructure, aligning with the growing trends of agentic systems and automated quality control.

marsbit36m ago

Capturing 15 Top-Tier Zero-Day Vulnerabilities: A Consensus Protocol Debug Agent Framework Built by 0G Lab in Collaboration with Teams from NUS, PKU, and BUPT

marsbit36m ago

a16z crypto Partner: Cash Flow Is the True Moat

Title: a16z Crypto Partner: Capital Flow is the True Moat In business history, enduringly successful enterprises often share a core logic: capturing value by facilitating its creation and transfer within an ecosystem, taking a share of the proceeds. The scale of value flowing through the ecosystem directly correlates with the company's growth. Cryptography is the first modern technology natively suited to this commercial logic. Startups that don't leverage this framework in product design and business model construction miss significant opportunities. Stablecoins enable internet-speed, 24/7 global settlement of value with end-to-end programmability. With open underlying channels for capital flow and transparent unit economics, every circulating dollar globally represents potential flow in this arena. Blockchain is inherently a network business model. All transactions are recorded on a shared ledger, and each new participant strengthens this foundational system for future developers. More users and applications increase the network's value for all. Crypto entrepreneurs start with built-in network effects, unlike traditional businesses that spend years building them on legacy infrastructure. Network tokens amplify this advantage. A well-designed token system aligns users, developers, service providers, and validators around a common goal—network growth—while distributing rewards based on contribution. All proceeds flow back to ecosystem participants, creating a virtuous cycle of value circulation. This is not a new logic; the crypto industry simply makes it easier for startups to implement and scale. Historic giants like railroads, Standard Oil, AT&T, and modern leaders like Google and AWS succeeded by positioning themselves at critical junctures of value flow. In finance, Visa processed $15.7 trillion in payments (net revenue: $35.9B), and top market makers like Jane Street thrive by being in the path of order flow, benefiting from volume. Combining capital flow with network effects creates one of business's most robust models. As Jeff Bezos noted, "Your margin is my opportunity." This is acutely true in traditional finance, where sectors like payments, custody, and settlements extract significant fees (e.g., 2-3% for card networks, 6-9% for cross-border transfers). These profits represent opportunities for disruption by reducing costs and increasing efficiency, as proven by Stripe and Square in payments. Crypto founders can build the next-generation infrastructure: programmable, instant, global, and inherently embedded in capital flow paths. Opportunities extend beyond finance to markets like compute/GPU trading, AI training data, energy, robotics, and critical minerals—areas poised for massive global value movement that existing channels cannot handle. These are blue oceans for new, programmable infrastructure centered on capital flow, free from entrenched platforms and intermediaries. Founders should ask: Is your business at the heart of a value flow? Does your revenue scale 10x with ecosystem transaction growth? Where are the highest margins relative to value created in your target market? The answers point to the opportunity: cut existing costs, enter new value flow arenas, and grow through network effects.

Foresight News37m ago

a16z crypto Partner: Cash Flow Is the True Moat

Foresight News37m ago

Unveiling the 'White-haired Stock God' Serenity: A Spiritual Remedy for Anxious Retail Investors

The article details the rise of Serenity, dubbed the "White-Haired Stock God," whose social media posts have recently caused significant volatility in China's A-share market. Previously gaining fame in international retail investor communities, Serenity is known for his "Chokepoint Investment" strategy targeting small monopolies in the AI supply chain, reportedly achieving returns over 3612% this year. His influence stems from his background as a former AI research scientist, detailed analysis, and a massive following on X, where his subscriber count has surpassed Elon Musk's. In early June, Serenity's Chinese-language posts mentioning A-shares like LeaderDrive (Lide Xiebo), Easun, and Innolight triggered immediate 20% surges in their stock prices. He later clarified that some recommendations were crowdsourced from followers and claimed he did not hold positions in these stocks, stating his actions were "just for fun" to offer a foreign perspective on Chinese markets. This activity drew scrutiny from Chinese financial media, which warned of potential "pump-and-dump" schemes and legal risks. While anonymous, clues suggest Serenity is likely a Chinese-speaking individual living in Japan. He maintains his anonymity due to past harassment but enjoys substantial monthly income from his paid subscriptions. The article posits that Serenity embodies the market's current appetite for a charismatic, successful figure during the AI bull run, serving as an "outward projection" of bullish sentiment. It concludes by noting the cyclical nature of such market icons, warning that the same crowds that elevate them often seek scapegoats when trends reverse.

Odaily星球日报42m ago

Unveiling the 'White-haired Stock God' Serenity: A Spiritual Remedy for Anxious Retail Investors

Odaily星球日报42m ago

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How to Buy EPIC

Welcome to HTX.com! We've made purchasing Epic Chain (EPIC) simple and convenient. Follow our step-by-step guide to embark on your crypto journey.Step 1: Create Your HTX AccountUse your email or phone number to sign up for a free account on HTX. Experience a hassle-free registration journey and unlock all features.Get My AccountStep 2: Go to Buy Crypto and Choose Your Payment MethodCredit/Debit Card: Use your Visa or Mastercard to buy Epic Chain (EPIC) instantly.Balance: Use funds from your HTX account balance to trade seamlessly.Third Parties: We've added popular payment methods such as Google Pay and Apple Pay to enhance convenience.P2P: Trade directly with other users on HTX.Over-the-Counter (OTC): We offer tailor-made services and competitive exchange rates for traders.Step 3: Store Your Epic Chain (EPIC)After purchasing your Epic Chain (EPIC), store it in your HTX account. Alternatively, you can send it elsewhere via blockchain transfer or use it to trade other cryptocurrencies.Step 4: Trade Epic Chain (EPIC)Easily trade Epic Chain (EPIC) on HTX's spot market. Simply access your account, select your trading pair, execute your trades, and monitor in real-time. We offer a user-friendly experience for both beginners and seasoned traders.

2.0k Total ViewsPublished 2025.03.17Updated 2026.06.02

How to Buy EPIC

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