Key Points

South Korean retail investors are increasingly favoring crypto-related stocks over US big tech. The GENIUS Act has accelerated interest in stablecoin-linked shares. Domestic market strength and currency gains have reduced overseas investments. Analysts expect cautious foreign stock activity amid US tariff concerns.

Key Points: South Korean Investors Shift From US Tech to Crypto Stocks

  • Crypto-related stocks surged to 36.5% of top buys in June
  • US big tech purchases dropped sharply from $1.68B to $260M
  • GENIUS Act spurred stablecoin investments
  • Weak overseas market momentum persists amid domestic outperformance
2 min read

S. Korean retail investors shift from US big tech to crypto-related stocks

South Korean retail investors pivot from US big tech to crypto-related stocks, driven by regulatory changes and market trends.

"Investments in virtual assets, particularly in shares related to stablecoins, have expanded following the passage of the U.S. GENIUS Act. — Korean Center for International Finance"

Seoul, Aug 11

South Korean individuals investing in overseas stocks have increasingly turned to virtual asset-related shares, such as those tied to stablecoins, instead of US big tech shares, a report showed on Monday.

The proportion of virtual asset-related stocks among the top 50 net-bought stocks by local individual investors rose from 8.5 percent in January to 36.5 percent in June before slightly declining to 31.4 percent in July, according to a report by the Korean Center for International Finance (KCIF).

Net purchases of the top seven U.S. big tech stocks, however, dropped from a monthly average of $1.68 billion between January and April to $440 million in May, $670 million in June and further to $260 million in July, reports Yonhap news agency.

"Investments in virtual assets, particularly in shares related to stablecoins, have expanded following the passage of the U.S. GENIUS Act," the report said. Last month, U.S. President Donald Trump signed the act, which focuses on setting up regulatory guidelines for the stablecoin industry and paves the way for private firms to issue them.

Overall, South Korean retail investors became net sellers of overseas stocks in May after several months of net buying and continued to sell through June.

Although they returned to net buying in July with purchases totaling $499 million, the momentum remained weak compared with the monthly average buying of $3.8 billion during the first four months of this year.

"Since June, the domestic stock market has outperformed overseas markets, while the local currency has strengthened, prompting individual investors to withdraw their investments from foreign markets," the KCIF said.

Given lingering concerns about the impact of the U.S. tariff scheme on the real economy, retail investors are unlikely to actively invest in overseas stocks for the time being, it added.

—IANS

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Crypto stocks are too volatile for my liking. I lost money during the last crypto crash. Stick to blue chips I say! Indian markets have given better returns than many foreign markets this year anyway.
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Aditya G
The GENIUS Act seems to be changing global investment patterns. Indian regulators should take note - proper crypto regulations could attract more investment into our markets too. Currently too much uncertainty here.
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Sarah B
As an NRI investor, I've noticed Korean markets often lead global retail trends. Their shift to crypto stocks is significant, but I'd wait for more stability before following suit. The US tariff situation makes everything unpredictable.
K
Karthik V
Stablecoins are the future! With rupee volatility, having dollar-pegged crypto assets makes sense. But Indian investors need to be careful - many fake platforms are cheating people in the name of crypto investments.
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Nisha Z
The article misses mentioning how much Korean investors are putting into Indian markets. Our growth story is strong, yet foreign retail investment from countries like Korea remains low. Need more awareness campaigns abroad!
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Michael C
While the crypto shift is interesting, I'm concerned about the quality of reporting here. The article jumps between different metrics (percentages vs dollar amounts) making comparisons difficult. More rigorous financial journalism needed.

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