Having tracked the East Asian digital asset market for so many years, Korea’s recent moves have truly been surprising.



The market that once pushed Bitcoin to a solid 20%-50% premium—the legendary “Kimchi Premium” that made global altcoins take notice—has now seen a dramatic shift. Daily trading volume on leading exchanges has plunged from a peak of $12 billion to under $2.4 billion, an 80% evaporation that can only be described as a cliff-like retreat. Second-tier platforms are faring even worse, with trading depth so thin that a single order in many small tokens can crash the price, and liquidity is as poor as it was in the 2018 bear market.

Even more surreal is the change in community atmosphere. Those Korean retail investors who used to stay up late analyzing on-chain data and going all-in on MEME coins are now crowding into discussions about whether Samsung’s stock price can break 1 million won, or if SK Hynix’s expansion plans are reliable. Crypto channels are so quiet that even the bots can’t be bothered to post ads—this contrast is honestly a bit ironic.

The logic behind the capital outflow isn’t complicated: the stock market is offering too much. This round isn’t pure speculation—Korean chip manufacturers are actually reaping real, tangible gains from the AI compute boom. While Silicon Valley giants are still making grand announcements, Samsung and SK have quietly ramped up HBM (High Bandwidth Memory) production, effectively gripping Nvidia by the throat.

Retail investors’ logic is simple: rather than gambling on the next 100x coin on an ETH Layer 2, it’s better to buy stocks and enjoy definite premiums. After all, AI chips mean visible, tangible order growth, unlike the crypto market where you’re constantly guessing the whales’ moves. This massive capital shift is essentially “certain returns” delivering a dimensionality-reducing blow to “high-volatility gambling.”
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BearMarketBuildervip
· 19h ago
Has the kimchi premium disappeared completely? Is this still the crazy Korean market I know... But then again, it makes sense. With Samsung and SK's chip orders sitting there, who would want to gamble on hundredfold coins every day in the secondary network?
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OldLeekMastervip
· 12-11 13:37
Korean premium prices have reverted to their previous levels overnight, and this turnaround is quite decisive. Koreans have all started investing in chip stocks, no wonder the crypto circle is freezing cold.
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OnlyOnMainnetvip
· 12-11 00:52
Kimchi premium plummeted from 12 billion to 2.4 billion, the contrast is really incredible. Retail investors are all researching Samsung's stock now, how can they still trade cryptocurrencies?
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BearMarketMonkvip
· 12-09 20:34
The kimchi premium disappeared overnight, now that's true letting go. Retail investors have all run to the stock market, who's still here to gamble on MEME coins with us...
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SignatureDeniedvip
· 12-09 20:26
Once bitten by the kimchi premium, twice shy for ten years. Dropping from 12 billion to 2.4 billion—this isn’t a correction, it’s an exodus. To put it bluntly, Koreans have realized that the profits from trading chip stocks are tangible and much more reliable than speculating on the next MEME coin. The liquidity is so poor that it’s reached the point where dumping causes a crash, which is truly absurd.
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SneakyFlashloanvip
· 12-09 20:26
The kimchi premium is dead, really dead this time. I remember back then a bunch of people were going all-in on the kimchi premium, but now there’s not even anyone left in the chat groups, haha.
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GasGoblinvip
· 12-09 20:25
The kimchi premium is dead; now Koreans have finally learned to earn real money. Rather than going all-in on MEME coins, it's better to play with chip stocks—there's nothing wrong with that logic.
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BuyHighSellLowvip
· 12-09 20:17
Oh man, the kimchi premium crash is really something... Dropped from 12 billion to 2.4 billion, it was gone before I even realized. Koreans are really starting to trade chip stocks now, no one’s even holding onto MEME coins anymore. The shift happened unbelievably fast.
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