This Time It's Meta: AI Peak Fears Trigger Another Market Panic - Seoul Economic Daily Featured News from South Korea
This Time It's Meta: AI Peak Fears Trigger Another Market Panic

Meta, which has continued massive investment in artificial intelligence (AI) talent and infrastructure, is reviewing a "neocloud" business that would sell idle computing resources to outside parties, reigniting debate over a global semiconductor peak. The news raised the possibility that the capital expenditure (CAPEX) of hyperscalers, which have aggressively built AI infrastructure, could turn downward. Following Apple's recent product price increases driven by soaring semiconductor prices, observations of slowing AI demand have also emerged, causing shares of global semiconductor companies to plunge across the board. On Monday, Bloomberg reported that Meta had launched its "MetaCompute" plan to sell surplus computing resources from its own data centers to outside parties. The plan involves offering its in-house AI model "MuseSpark" as an external service, along with a neocloud business that would lease computing capacity itself. Earlier, SpaceX, which merged with xAI, signed cloud lease agreements with Google and Anthropic. Some in the market interpret the move as Meta, having fallen behind in the AI race like xAI, considering the neocloud business as a "Plan B" in case its own AI business fails. As a result, debate over the sustainability of AI infrastructure investment has resurfaced. Amid the controversy over excessive AI infrastructure investment, pessimists say Big Tech is reaching its limits in absorbing soaring semiconductor prices. On the other hand, optimists maintain that this is merely a temporary setback with no problem in semiconductor fundamentals, similar to concerns over declining memory demand sparked by DeepSeek early last year and by Google's TurboQuant early this year. In the market, the prevailing view is that AI demand still greatly exceeds supply, and that interpreting this as a signal of reduced AI investment is excessive. Nevertheless, the market reacted convulsively to Meta's entry into the cloud business. On the New York stock exchange the previous day, Micron (-10.57%) and SanDisk (-10.62%) plunged, and on this day in the domestic market, Samsung Electronics and SK hynix fell 9.06% and 14.57%, respectively. SK hynix's decline was the largest in about 17 years, since November 20, 2008 (-14.91%), during the global financial crisis. The KOSPI closed at 7,648.09, down 7.89%....

Korea M&A Deals Jump 65% in First Half on New-Business Push - Seoul Economic Daily Featured News from South Korea
Korea M&A Deals Jump 65% in First Half on New-Business Push
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Successive trillion-won investments by major Korean conglomerates and large overseas private equity funds (PEFs) drove the country's mergers and acquisitions (M&A) market significantly higher in the first half of this year. The increase came as major companies completed big deals to expand into new businesses while divesting non-core operations. Global PEFs are ramping up large-scale investments in Korea, which offers a well-established artificial intelligence (AI) value chain. According to a league table compiled by The Seoul Economic Daily on Wednesday, M&A deals that completed final payment in the first half of this year totaled 244 transactions worth 46.9796 trillion won. That marked a 65.5% surge from 28.3945 trillion won (222 transactions) in the same period last year. On an announcement basis, however, deals in the first half numbered 57 transactions worth a total of 20.0624 trillion won, suggesting the market could contract somewhat in the second half. DB Insurance completed its acquisition of U.S. insurer Fortegra for 2.3106 trillion won, finishing a cross-border big deal. POSCO, which is undergoing a business restructuring, sold its Chinese stainless steel unit for 524.8 billion won and invested 1.6096 trillion won in a joint venture in India. Europe-based EQT Partners spent 3.2 trillion won to acquire management control of Douzone Bizon, a Korean comprehensive information and communications technology (ICT) solutions firm. Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (KKR) of the United States invested 1.12 trillion won in Samsung SDS convertible bonds (CBs), becoming the first global PEF to join hands with Samsung. France's Air Liquide acquired DIG Airgas for 4.85 trillion won. The investment banking (IB) industry said the trend of major companies injecting large sums to secure future growth engines emerged across the board. The industry also pointed to the inflow of global capital seeking to gain an early foothold in Korea's AI infrastructure and technological capabilities as a major shift spreading recently....

Minister Kim Weighs New Nuclear Plants If More Fabs Are Built - Seoul Economic Daily Featured News from South Korea
Minister Kim Weighs New Nuclear Plants If More Fabs Are Built
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Kim Sung-hwan, Minister of Climate, Energy and Environment, said the government could consider building new nuclear power plants as part of developing a semiconductor cluster in the southwestern region. The remarks are interpreted as reflecting a judgment that if more than four semiconductor fabs are built or large-scale artificial intelligence (AI) data centers are added, electricity demand would be difficult to meet without new nuclear plants. Currently, the southwestern region operates six nuclear reactors with a total generation capacity of 6 gigawatts (GW) at the Hanbit Nuclear Power Site in Yeonggwang County. Appearing on a radio broadcast Sunday, Kim responded to a question about companies requesting additional nuclear plant construction in the southwestern region. "Because semiconductor fabs and AI data centers have the character of baseload power sources, if more are built, that is an area worth considering," he said. Baseload power refers to a generation source that produces a constant amount of electricity 24 hours a day to meet minimum demand within the power grid. Korea mainly uses nuclear plants and coal-fired plants as baseload power. The point is that semiconductor fabs and AI data centers also use electricity steadily around the clock, so power must be supplemented with baseload sources. On Nov. 30, Kang Hoon-sik, Presidential Chief of Staff, also responded to a question about whether new nuclear plant construction was under consideration, saying, "You can assume that such content will be included in the 12th Basic Plan for Electricity Supply and Demand." Kim, who oversees Korea's energy policy, is leaving open the possibility of building additional nuclear plants because he has judged that future electricity demand cannot be met with renewable energy alone. "Electric vehicles and heat pumps are increasing, and on top of that there is a special semiconductor boom, and AI data centers and AI robots are all sharply increasing electricity demand," Kim said. "This is a time when serious public debate is needed on how to handle this." According to the projections the government released to establish the 12th Basic Plan for Electricity Supply and Demand, annual electricity demand, which stood at 549.4 terawatt-hours (TWh) in 2025, is projected to rise 26.3% to 694.1 TWh by 2040. Adding the power demand from the three recently announced mega projects, electricity demand is expected to increase even more sharply. "To respond to the climate crisis, fossil fuels must not be used, but there are aspects that are difficult to achieve with renewable energy alone," Kim stressed. "We need to move toward a new energy mix system in which nuclear power is laid as a kind of baseload source, with renewable energy attached on top of it." Kim also promised a speedy push to build infrastructure for the southwestern semiconductor cluster. Citing the fact that it took too long to develop the site for the Yongin semiconductor cluster in the past, he said, "That was a concept from the era of '50,000-won Samsung Electronics,' and now the situation is different." "50,000-won Samsung Electronics" refers to the period when Samsung Electronics' stock price moved sideways in the 50,000-won range. As the semiconductor industry emerges as a key future industry, the remark is interpreted as an intention to concentrate policy capacity on building infrastructure....

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Korea Breaks Monthly Export Record Before Japan — Samsung Goes Quantum | July 2, 2026
AI PRISM· July 2, 2026

Korea Breaks Monthly Export Record Before Japan — Samsung Goes Quantum | July 2, 2026

Korea crossed the $100 billion monthly export threshold in June 2026 — becoming only the fourth country in history to do so, and beating Japan to the milestone.In today's AI PRISM: Front Page Daily, we cover four stories reshaping Korea's economic position: the record $102.3 billion June export figure driven by AI semiconductor demand, Samsung's plan to embed quantum computing into its chip manufacturing process, Korea's entry into a 140-member global dollar stablecoin consortium alongside Google and Stripe, and why LS Securities is calling KOSPI 10,000 by year-end. The data points are different — the direction is the same.Sources:"Monthly Exports Break $100 Billion — Ahead of Japan" — Seoul Economic Daily, July 2, 2026"Samsung Embeds Quantum Computing in Semiconductor Process" — Seoul Economic Daily, July 2, 2026"'Mega Dollar Coin': 13 Korean Companies Join Open USD Consortium" — Seoul Economic Daily, July 2, 2026"Look at Earnings, Not Rates — KOSPI 10,000 This Year Is Fully Possible" — Seoul Economic Daily, July 2, 2026About AI PRISM:AI PRISM is Seoul Economic Daily's WAN-IFRA award-winning newsroom AI series, delivering Korean economic news adapted for global audiences. Episodes are produced with AI assistance and reviewed by a human editor.Tags:#KoreaExports #Semiconductors #QuantumComputing #SamsungElectronics #OpenUSD #Stablecoin #HBM #KOSPI #KoreaEconomy #AIInfrastructure #SeoulEconomicDaily #AIPRISM #WANIFRA

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