An Epic David vs. Goliath Stock Battle Is Underway

Meme mania swept through Wall Street in 2021. Retail investors gathered on social media and coordinated trading strategies to short squeeze high-profile hedge funds. Their success was more than financial; it was hailed as a David versus Goliath battle, a victory for the underdogs that toppled the almighty.

That was just a skirmish. The conflict between retail and professional investors today has extended well beyond “degen” traders active on Reddit and a few hard-charging hedge funds. We now have middle-class households frantically managing their wealth to beat AI job threats, pitting them against asset managers de-risking and rebalancing portfolios according to the industry’s conventional wisdom.

This tension is most pronounced and easiest to track in South Korea and Taiwan, home to the world’s best-performing stock markets this year. Foreign institutional investors have sold more than $110 billion of their holdings, while local retail traders have filled the void.

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Professionals are selling because of concentration risk brought on by the parabolic rally in AI infrastructure stocks. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index, in particular, has gone through a structural change. Three stocks — Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp. and South Korea’s Samsung Electronics Co. and SK Hynix Inc. — now account for over 30% of the entire index, versus 18% at the beginning of the year. Ironically, by that weighting, China — the world’s second-largest economy — is now only the third-largest emerging market.