Svmuu News: South Korea’s IPO market has cooled rapidly after a strong first half of the year, with newly listed companies seeing their stock prices plummet following their initial public offerings due to heightened market uncertainty and a shift in investor sentiment.
Data from the Korea Exchange on Sunday showed that 14 of the 18 companies that went public this year are currently trading below their offering prices, with high-profile IPOs in the tech and fashion sectors leading the decline. Market analysts attribute this to inflated IPO pricing and the rapid exit of short-term speculative capital following the listings. Although regulators have recently tightened lock-up period requirements for institutional investors, macroeconomic shocks and supply-demand imbalances have left newly listed small- and mid-cap stocks particularly vulnerable.
Observers note that domestic liquidity remains highly concentrated in large-cap stocks within the artificial intelligence and semiconductor supply chains, making it difficult for capital to flow toward newer, less-established listed companies. The South Korean financial sector is currently pinning its hopes on a wave of IPOs by large enterprises and high-valuation companies in the second half of the year to drive market recovery, while new guidelines for dual listings have also been issued. (Jin Shi)