South Korea, a nation long revered by the digital asset industry as the "El Dorado of liquidity," is seeing a change in investment trends.
The country's famously tech-savvy and highly active retail traders are pivoting their capital away from digital assets and pouring it into the domestic stock market.
They are being lured by the explosive, momentum-driven returns of the artificial intelligence and semiconductor sectors.
South Korea has historically been a major hub and a boon for cryptocurrency trading due a highly enthusiastic population of retail investors, technological infrastructure as well as appetite for volatility.
Many cryptocurrency projects have historically referred to South Korea as the "El Dorado of liquidity".
A massive decline in trading volumes
According to TRM Labs, a global blockchain intelligence firm, South Korea still maintained its position as the second-largest market for retail crypto activity in the first quarter of 2026. It trailed only the United States, which posted $212 billion.
However, beneath that high ranking lies a severe contraction. South Korea’s cryptocurrency trading volume plummeted 28% compared to the previous year. This is the sharpest decline among all major global markets, falling significantly harder than the global average drop of 20%.
Domestic competition
The domestic benchmark KOSPI index has transformed into a global powerhouse.
It has skyrocketed approximately 196% over the past year. This incredible rally has made the KOSPI the top-performing stock market among all G20 nations, vastly outpacing advanced Western economies.
In contrast to the booming stock market, cryptocurrencies have largely stagnated since their peak in late 2025.
Traditional equities are now delivering the extreme daily price swings that previously made crypto so attractive to Korean traders. For instance, during a recent trading session where Bitcoin rose a respectable 4.7%, large-cap domestic tech stocks like SK hynix and Samsung Electro-Mechanics surged by 6.42% and 16.63%, respectively.

U.Today Editorial Team
Dan Burgin