Samsung Electronics dropped 6.3% on Wednesday after its blockbuster Q2 earnings report failed to impress investors, pulling South Korea’s KOSPI index into a technical bear market and dragging down chip names across Asia.
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., SMSD.L
The company had forecast a 19-fold jump in second-quarter operating profit, driven by strong demand for high-bandwidth memory chips used in AI servers. By most measures, the numbers were extraordinary. But they weren’t extraordinary enough.
Samsung opened Wednesday in positive territory before quickly reversing course. By midday in Seoul, the stock was down about 6.3%, erasing gains that had briefly lifted it into the green during early trading.
SK Hynix fell 5.7%, giving back nearly 6% of gains it had briefly held. LG Innotek dropped more than 6%. The South Korean semiconductor complex was broadly in the red.
The selloff pushed the KOSPI down 5.4% for the day. The index is now 22.8% below its June 22 peak, crossing the 20% decline threshold that defines a technical bear market.
Still, context matters. The KOSPI remains up 72% in 2026 so far, making it one of the best-performing major global indexes this year. SK Hynix is up 218.9% year-to-date. Samsung is up 131%. Micron has gained 229%.
The pain wasn’t limited to Korea. Japan’s chip suppliers gave back early gains, with Murata Manufacturing down about 2%, TDK falling nearly 2%, and Sony slipping around 1%.
Taiwan held up better. The Taiwan Weighted index edged 0.6% higher, and Nvidia supplier Hon Hai Precision held a modest 0.2% gain after pulling back from its morning high.
Micron, the U.S. rival to both Samsung and SK Hynix, ended Tuesday down 4.7%. It was falling again in Wednesday’s premarket — down 6.6% to $875.54.
Mizuho analysts put it bluntly. In a note following the earnings release, they said the results would likely cause “modest disappointment,” not because the numbers were bad, but because Samsung sits at the “epicenter of the hottest sector in the whole market” — and the Street had already priced in a big beat.
The debate has shifted. It’s no longer about whether AI demand is real. It’s about whether earnings can keep surprising a market that has already run up sharply in anticipation.
That repricing started late last week when profit-taking hit high-flying AI names after one of the strongest first-half rallies on record. Samsung’s earnings accelerated the move Tuesday. Wednesday’s failed recovery suggests dip buyers aren’t ready to step in yet.
The Nasdaq Composite fell 1.2% on Tuesday, adding pressure to Asian markets when they opened Wednesday.
Micron was trading at $875.54 in Wednesday’s premarket, down 6.6%.
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