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Iran Conflict 2026
10MAR

KOSPI hits second circuit breaker

3 min read
04:55UTC

South Korea's KOSPI fell more than 8% on Monday as the oil shock hit the world's most energy-import-dependent major economy. Samsung dropped over 10%.

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Key takeaway

Two circuit breakers in four sessions signals that Korean market stabilisation mechanisms are being exhausted, not absorbing the shock — indicating traders are pricing in a structural change to Korea's cost base, not a temporary disruption.

South Korea's KOSPI fell more than 8% on Monday morning, triggering its second circuit breaker — a 20-minute trading suspension — in four sessions. Samsung Electronics dropped over 10%. SK Hynix, the world's second-largest memory chipmaker, fell 12.3%.

South Korea imports 98% of its crude oil, almost all of it from The Gulf. The country consumed approximately 2.6 million barrels per day in 2025. At Monday's Brent price of $116, South Korea's daily crude import bill is roughly $300 million — up from approximately $175 million before the war began. That difference, sustained over a quarter, would strip roughly $11 billion from the Korean economy before it reaches consumers as higher petrol, heating, and manufacturing input costs.

The semiconductor sector is particularly exposed. Chip fabrication is extraordinarily energy-intensive — a single advanced fab consumes as much electricity as a small city. Samsung and SK Hynix together account for roughly 60% of global DRAM production and a substantial share of NAND flash. Their cost structures assumed energy prices in the $65–80 range. At $116 Brent, downstream electricity and petrochemical feedstock costs erode the margin advantage that Korean chipmakers hold over competitors in the United States and Japan, where energy mixes are less Gulf-dependent.

The circuit breaker mechanism itself is the signal. Korean exchanges trigger a halt when the KOSPI moves 8% from the previous close — a threshold designed for extraordinary events. Two triggers in four days means the market is not experiencing a single shock and adjusting; it is experiencing a continuous repricing that the normal trading mechanism cannot absorb in orderly fashion. The last time KOSPI triggered consecutive circuit breakers was March 2020, during the initial COVID-19 selloff.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Circuit breakers are automatic 20-minute trading pauses triggered when a market falls too far too fast. When the same exchange triggers two in four days, it means traders resume selling as soon as the pause ends — the mechanism is not working. South Korea imports essentially all its oil, meaning a 72% price spike directly compresses profits across its entire industrial base simultaneously: car manufacturers, chip fabs, steel mills, petrochemical plants. The market is not overreacting; it is repricing the permanent cost structure of the Korean economy at current energy prices.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The semiconductor dimension is the globally significant variable the body does not develop. Samsung and SK Hynix together represent approximately 60–70% of global DRAM and a large share of NAND flash production. A sustained Korean industrial energy shock could disrupt global semiconductor supply chains — adding a technology supply crisis to the energy and financial contagion already underway, with downstream effects on every industry that depends on memory chips.

Root Causes

South Korea's 98%+ oil import dependency is a structural vulnerability that Korean industrial policy partially hedged through supply-route diversification and a 90-day strategic reserve — but both were designed for a 1–2 week disruption, not a sustained Hormuz closure. The concentration of strategic industries (semiconductors, shipbuilding, petrochemicals) in energy-intensive production means there is no rapid domestic substitution pathway.

Escalation

Korean institutional investors — pension funds, insurance companies — may be being forced to sell equities to meet margin calls or liquidity requirements, which creates a mechanical amplifier independent of underlying fundamentals. Simultaneously, won depreciation against the dollar (oil is priced in USD) would further inflate import costs in local currency terms, creating a feedback loop that circuit breakers cannot interrupt.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Samsung and SK Hynix production cost increases will feed into global DRAM and NAND pricing within 2–3 quarters, transmitting the Korean energy shock into consumer electronics and data centre capex globally.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Risk

    Won depreciation against the dollar could compound the oil import cost shock beyond what the dollar oil price alone implies, forcing Bank of Korea FX intervention that depletes reserves needed for a potentially longer crisis.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Forced institutional selling by Korean pension funds and insurers — triggered by margin calls — could transmit Korean equity stress into global bond markets through portfolio rebalancing, even before European and US markets open.

    Immediate · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #30 · Mojtaba named leader; oil $116; acid rain

CNBC· 9 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
KOSPI hits second circuit breaker
The second KOSPI circuit breaker in four sessions signals that Korean markets cannot absorb the repricing of energy costs at this speed. South Korea imports 98% of its crude oil; a sustained Brent price above $100 compresses margins across the country's entire export-manufacturing base, from semiconductors to shipbuilding.
Different Perspectives
South Korean financial markets
South Korean financial markets
South Korea, which imports virtually all its crude oil, is absorbing the war's economic transmission most acutely among non-belligerents. The second KOSPI circuit breaker in four sessions — with Samsung down over 10% and SK Hynix down 12.3% — reflects an industrial economy unable to reprice energy costs that have risen 72% in ten days. The market response indicates Korean industry cannot sustain oil above $100 per barrel without margin compression across manufacturing, semiconductors, and shipping.
Migrant worker communities in the Gulf
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Azerbaijan — President Ilham Aliyev
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Oil-importing nations (Japan, South Korea, India)
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Turkey
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