Why KOSPI Circuit Breakers Became Routine
In 2026 the KOSPI has tripped its circuit breaker about as often as the prior quarter-century combined. The failsafes are not failing—they are revealing a market whose structure, products, and investor culture now manufacture eight-percent moves as ordinary weather.
mergency Brakes Were Never Meant to Be Interior Design A market failsafe is supposed to feel like a fire alarm: rare, unpleasant, and socially clarifying. Through most of the Korea Exchange's history, that was roughly true. Since the circuit-breaker regime matured after the late-1990s crisis architecture, Level‑1 halts—an eight‑percent drop sustained for a minute, then a twenty‑minute freeze—arrived during wars, pandemics, and bona fide systemic shocks. As of mid‑July 2026, roughly half of all KOSPI circuit-breaker firings on record have crowded into a single calendar year. Sidecars, the gentler cousin that pauses program trading when KOSPI 200 futures whip five percent for a minute, have already eclipsed the full‑year tally of 2008. The emergency brake has become…
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