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Sunday, July 19, 2026
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KB Report: Korea Solo Households Rotated Into Stocks at Peak

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KB Report: Korea Solo Households Rotated Into Stocks at Peak

KB Report: Korea Solo Households Rotated Into Stocks at Peak

A new survey showing South Korea's single-person households pulling money out of bank deposits and into equities landed on July 19 — into a market that has spent the past six weeks unwinding exactly the kind of leveraged retail bets the report documents. The timing is the story.

What the report says

KB Financial Group (105560.KS), Korea's largest financial group by assets and the parent of Kookmin Bank, published its "2026 Korea Single-Person Household Report" on July 19. According to the report, deposits and savings fell to 28.3% of solo households' financial portfolios, down 7.8 percentage points from two years earlier, while stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) rose to 21.1%, up 6.1 points. Crypto assets edged up 1.3 points to 3.5% (Chosun Biz, ETNews, both citing the KB report).

The leverage line is the one a risk manager reads twice. The share of respondents who said they had borrowed money to invest in financial products reached 34%, up 5.2 points from 28.8% in 2024, per the report as summarized by Chosun Biz. KB's in-house think tank, the KB Financial Group Management Research Institute, tied the shift to a "money move" out of safe assets driven by the first-half equity rally.

Crucially, the survey of 2,000 single-person households aged 25 to 59 was fielded from February 25 to March 23, 2026 (Chosun Biz) — near the euphoric peak, not now.

Why a New York desk should care about a demographics survey

The cohort is not niche. Single-person households numbered 8.05 million at the end of 2024, or 36.1% of all households — a record high, up from 6.64 million (31.7%) in 2020 (The Korea Herald, citing a welfare ministry factbook). A durable tilt in how one-in-three Korean households allocate savings is a structural input into domestic equity demand, the very demand that backstopped the KOSPI, Korea's benchmark equity index, when foreigners sold.

And sell they did. The KOSPI roughly doubled in the first half of 2026 — among the best half-year returns of any major market — with retail investors absorbing record foreign outflows, often through leveraged single-stock ETFs (CNBC; market reporting). The KB survey captures that same household in the act of levering into the rally.

The problem: the market has already turned

The report describes February–March behavior; June and July have tested it. The KOSPI plunged 8.37% in a single session on June 8, breaking below 7,500, with Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix each down about 10% intraday; retail margin debt stood at 37.74 trillion won ($27.5 billion) as of June 4 (TradingKey).

Since then, the leverage has been coming off. Margin-loan balances fell to 34.71 trillion won ($25.3 billion) by July 14, down 9.9% from 38.53 trillion won ($28.1 billion) on June 22, as the KOSPI sat at 7,284.41 on July 15 (Seoul Economic Daily). Over July 8–15, individual investors net-sold 7.97 trillion won ($5.8 billion) of stock while foreigners returned as net buyers, purchasing 2.32 trillion won ($1.7 billion) on July 15 alone (Seoul Economic Daily). The household that borrowed to buy the rally is now, in aggregate, delevering into the drawdown.

That is the tension the report cannot resolve on its own: a rising equity share of household portfolios could be a lasting rotation out of deposits, or a bull-market artifact measured at the peak and already reversing. The 34% "borrowed to invest" figure looks like conviction in a rising market and a vulnerability in a falling one.

What to watch

Three data points confirm or refute the structural thesis: the trajectory of brokerage margin-loan balances (falling since late June per Seoul Economic Daily); whether individuals flip back to net buyers after their July selling; and next year's KB household survey, which will show whether the equity share holds through a drawdown or retraces toward deposits. Until then, this report is best read as a snapshot of peak-cycle risk appetite, not a verdict on where Korean household savings settle.


This article is journalism, not investment advice. LineVest is not a registered investment adviser. Figures are drawn from the cited KB Financial Group report and named news sources; won-to-dollar conversions use an approximate rate of 1,370 KRW per USD.

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