South Korean boy investor with 43% gains is new retail trading icon
Send a link to a friend
[February 09, 2021] By
Cynthia Kim
SEOUL (Reuters) - Watching the business
news first thing is a new routine for 12-year-old South Korean Kwon Joon,
as he dreams of becoming the next Warren Buffett after earning stellar
returns of 43% from a hobby picked up just last year: buying stocks.
Kwon pestered his mother to open a retail trading account last April
with savings of 25 million won ($22,400) as seed money, just as the
benchmark KOSPI index began recovering from its biggest dip in a decade.
"I really talked my parents into it, because I believed an expert who
was saying (on TV) that this is a once-in-a-decade opportunity," said
Kwon, who rode the steepest jump by year-end among MSCI's country
indexes..
"My role model is Warren Buffett," he added, in a reference to the U.S.
billionaire investor.
"Rather than short-term focused day trading, I want to keep my
investment for 10 to 20 years with a long-term perspective, hopefully to
maximize my returns."
South Korea's rookie investors like Kwon, who pursues "value investing"
in blue chip shares with funds garnered from gifts, trading mini-car
toys and running vending machines, have led the blistering rise of
retail trade amid the coronavirus pandemic.
More retail investors are teenagers or even younger, making up more than
two-thirds of the total value traded in the nation's shares, versus less
than 50% in 2019.
The trend has grown as equity markets lure parents disillusioned with
the education system and millennials working from home.
"I wonder, in this day and age, whether a college degree would be all
that important," said Kwon's mother, Lee Eun-joo, who fuelled his
passion by looking to expose him to business rather than tuition, seen
as key to getting ahead in academics.
"Because we live in a different world now, it could be better to become
an 'only-one' kind of person," added Lee, who feared even a good
schooling might not arm her son against dwindling job opportunities.
[to top of second column] |
Kwon Joon looks at a monitor as he checks investing information at
his room in Jeju, South Korea, February 8, 2021. Lee Eun-joo/Handout
via REUTERS
About 70% of the 214,800 stock brokerage accounts for minors at Kiwoom
Securities, South Korea's most retail-friendly brokerage, with a market share of
more than a fifth, were set up in January 2020 or after, its data shows.
Kwon, with time on his hands during last year's school closures for the
pandemic, drew up a wish list of purchases, which he made during market
corrections.
These ranged from South Korea's largest messenger app operator Kakao Corp., to
the world's biggest memory chip maker Samsung Electronics Co., and Hyundai
Motor.
Kwon's success also reflects the employment challenges for young South Koreans,
with one in four out of work by January, the worst level on record, despite
being among the most highly educated cohort in the OECD club of advanced
nations.
Three-quarters go on to college after high school, versus the grouping's 44.5%
average, but finding rewarding, creative work is tough. "There aren't enough
jobs for college graduates, so many are opting out to diversify their career
path early," said vocational researcher Min Sook-weon.
That is something Kwon understands.
"Rather than going to good schools like the Seoul National University, I'd
rather become a big investor," he said. "I also hope to do a lot of charity
work."
($1=1,115.1600 won)
(Reporting by Cynthia Kim; Additional reporting by Minwoo Park; Editing by
Clarence Fernandez)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|