South Korea has now overtaken the United Kingdom to become the world’s eighth-largest stock market. The total market capitalization of Korean equities has exploded more than 45% in 2026 alone to roughly $4.04 trillion, while the UK has barely moved, rising about 3% to $3.99 trillion. What is most revealing is that, as recently as the end of 2024, the UK market was about twice the size of South Korea’s, underscoring just how quickly capital can migrate when the cycle turns.
The benchmark KOSPI has gone vertical, breaking above 6,600 and pushing total market capitalization beyond $4 trillion for the first time. This is not a random rally. It is concentrated, powerful, and driven by a very specific sector. Semiconductor giants like Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix now account for more than 40% of the index, which tells you immediately this is a capital flow into AI infrastructure, not a broad-based economic boom.
Compare that to the FTSE 100, which represents the largest companies listed in London. The UK market remains dominated by financials, energy, and consumer staples. These are legacy sectors. They do not attract speculative capital in the same way that technology does during a cycle shift. The FTSE has gained roughly 4% this year, which is not catastrophic, but it is completely disconnected from where the momentum is flowing globally.
When you step back and look at the historical performance, the contrast becomes even clearer. The KOSPI began with a base value of 100 in 1980 and spent decades struggling to break major psychological barriers like 1,000 and then 2,000. The real acceleration came after 2020, with the index pushing past 3,000 in 2021 and then exploding higher into 2025–2026, where it surged through 4,000, 5,000, and now over 6,500 in rapid succession. That is not normal growth, that is a vertical phase driven by concentrated capital inflows.
The FTSE 100, by contrast, has historically been far more stable and far less dynamic. It represents mature, dividend-heavy companies, and while that provides consistency, it does not produce explosive upside during periods of technological transformation. It is the difference between a capital preservation market and a capital attraction market. The UK has become the former.
This is exactly what the Economic Confidence Model has always shown. Capital does not move randomly, it seeks opportunity, and more importantly, it seeks momentum. When a new technological cycle emerges, whether it was railroads, automobiles, or now artificial intelligence, capital flows toward the regions that dominate that infrastructure. Right now, that is Asia, not Europe.
