A sharp rally in South Korea’s stock market last year pushed the value of stocks held by minors higher even as the number of young shareholders and the amount of shares they owned declined, data showed.
According to the Korea Securities Depository on April 26, minors under 20 held about 2.9761 trillion won in shares at the end of last year among 88 companies in the top 200 by market capitalization that disclosed shareholder data by age. The total number of minor shareholders at those firms was 728,344. The depository provides stock-distribution data only for companies that have appointed it as their transfer agent.
The shift was clear compared with a year earlier. The average number of minor shareholders per company fell to 8,277 from 8,466, and average shareholdings slipped to about 370,000 shares from about 400,000. But the average value of those holdings jumped more than 72% to 33.8 billion won from 19.6 billion won, reflecting rising stock prices.
By company, Samsung Electronics drew the largest number of minor shareholders. At year’s end, 343,694 minors held 16,063,292 shares of the chip and electronics giant. While the number of minor shareholders and shares held fell about 13% and 17%, respectively, the stock price surged to 119,900 won from 53,200 won over the same period, lifting the per-person holding value to about 5.6 million won.
Similar patterns appeared elsewhere. At LG Energy Solution, 34,329 minors held 116,072 shares, with per-person holdings valued at about 1.24 million won. At Samsung Biologics, 3,928 minors held 22,882 shares, with per-person holdings valued at about 9.87 million won.
Other large-cap stocks also showed minors’ holdings valued in the millions of won per person, including Samsung Electro-Mechanics (about 4.06 million won), Samsung C&T (about 5.49 million won) and Shinhan Financial Group (about 2.59 million won).
The depository said it could not confirm stock-distribution data for some companies, including No. 2 market-cap SK hynix, apparently because they did not appoint it as transfer agent. As a result, the total value of stocks held by minors is likely higher than the disclosed figure.
Market watchers attributed the changes to profit-taking during the rally and shifting investment behavior. Last year, individual investors reduced exposure to sharply rising stocks by taking gains while moving funds into exchange-traded funds, or ETFs.
* This article has been translated by AI.
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