Behind the Collapse—Why Did the "Canary" Fall First



On March 4, 2026, the Korean stock market experienced a historic bloodbath. The KOSPI index plummeted 12.06 in a single day, setting a record for the largest decline ever, with circuit breakers triggered multiple times during trading, and market capitalization evaporating by over 574 trillion won. Why did this once-leading global market, the "most bullish stock market" at the beginning of the year, collapse so suddenly?

The fundamental reason lies in the "Achilles' heel" of Korea's economic structure. Over 70% of the crude oil imported from the Middle East is transported through the Strait of Hormuz. Middle Eastern conflicts pose a risk of disrupting Korea's industrial "blood supply." Citibank estimates that if oil prices remain above $82, Korea's GDP in 2026 could be dragged down by 0.45 percentage points.
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Even more deadly is the fragility of the domestic market structure. Leading chaebols like Samsung account for the vast majority of the index's weight. If foreign investors, driven by risk aversion, start selling off these top stocks, it could trigger a market-wide crash. This is a classic "Samsung Republic Syndrome"—when external black swan events occur, the highly concentrated market structure amplifies panic, turning a small butterfly wing flap into a storm that ultimately topples Korea's stock market, known as the global economic "canary."#美伊局势影响
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