Korean retail traders just became national villains—and they're not having it. After pouring a record $31 billion into U.S. equities this year, these investors are now being blamed for their own currency's nosedive. The backlash? Intense.



The logic goes like this: massive outflows to Wall Street drained liquidity from domestic markets, pressuring the won. Officials and analysts pointed fingers. Retail investors fired back, arguing they're simply chasing better returns abroad while local opportunities stagnate.

This clash highlights a broader tension—when capital crosses borders aggressively, someone always gets blamed. But are individual investors really responsible for macro currency shifts, or just convenient scapegoats? The fury suggests many feel unfairly targeted for making rational financial moves.
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LowCapGemHuntervip
· 12-09 18:08
LOL, once again they're shifting the blame onto retail investors... Korean bureaucrats are really good at finding scapegoats.
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BearMarketSunriservip
· 12-08 00:48
LOL, Korean retail investors are being made scapegoats? They just want to make money. --- $3.1 billion poured into US stocks, and they’re blaming retail investors for this too—typical bureaucrats. --- The key issue is there are no opportunities locally, who’s really to blame? --- Forcing macro problems onto retail as scapegoats, classic move. --- Feels like every time the exchange rate moves, someone has to take the blame—retail investors are the most convenient target. --- Rushing to US stocks to seek returns, only to get criticized by people from their own country—ridiculous. --- Isn’t it just about pursuing better returns? What’s wrong with that?
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bridge_anxietyvip
· 12-08 00:46
LOL, now Korean retail investors have become the scapegoats? Making money and still getting blamed... --- $3.1 billion, just to avoid terrible local opportunities, and now they're being treated as economic criminals. This logic is just absurd. --- To put it bluntly, the government can't handle the exchange rate, so they blame retail investors. So we're just supposed to get fleeced and not allowed to escape? --- It's always like this—macro issues get pinned on retail investors... truly classic maneuver. --- Instead of blaming investors, maybe they should reflect on why their own market is so unattractive. --- Isn't this just the natural result of capital flows? What's there to be mad about... a systemic issue gets forced into being a people problem. --- Korean officials: It's all the retail investors' fault... I can only laugh and say nothing.
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StakeOrRegretvip
· 12-08 00:38
LOL, they're shifting the blame to retail investors again. Same old trick.
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DAOplomacyvip
· 12-08 00:30
ngl, the scapegoating playbook is so predictable. macro problems need macro solutions, not blaming retail for rational capital allocation... arguably, wonky incentive structures at the policy level are the real culprit here.
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