South Korea's Volatility Index Hits Record High on July 16 as Leveraged ETFs Amplify Market Swings

According to Newsis, South Korea's VKOSPI volatility index (Korea's fear gauge) reached a record intraday high of 97.99 on July 16, as single-stock leveraged ETFs triggered amplified market movements through forced rebalancing. The self-amplifying structure—where ETF managers must rebalance daily to maintain target leverage ratios—creates a feedback loop: rising prices force additional purchases that push prices higher, while declining prices mandate further sales that deepen losses.

Market circuit breakers have been triggered 7 times in 2026 alone, exceeding half the total activations since the system's 2000 inception. Leveraged ETF trading volume accounts for 20-30% of underlying asset trading in South Korea, significantly higher than the U.S. level of approximately 5%, with semiconductor mega-cap stocks comprising half of domestic market concentration. South Korea's financial authorities announced regulatory measures on July 16, including a temporary halt on new leveraged ETF listings and stricter risk management requirements.

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