South Korea’s move above Canada was a rapid equity-market revaluation, not evidence that Canada’s market shrank. Bloomberg-compiled data reported by Moneycontrol put the value of Korea-listed companies up 71% so far in 2026 to about $4.59 trillion, just ahead of Canada’s roughly $4.5 trillion after a much smaller gain of about 7% [6].
The reason was simple: investors treated South Korea as a more direct public-market bet on the AI hardware boom.
The market-cap math changed fast
Global stock-market rankings are based on the total value of listed companies. That means a sharp rally in a country’s largest public companies can quickly move it up the table.
That is what happened in South Korea. The KOSPI had gained more than 70% so far this year, while Canada’s S&P/TSX Composite Index was up about 7% over the same period, according to the Bloomberg-based report [6]. The result was enough to push South Korea into the world’s seventh-largest equity-market slot by market capitalization [
6].
AI chip exposure made Korea the stronger trade
The rally was concentrated in companies tied to semiconductors and AI infrastructure. Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix both more than doubled this year, and Samsung recently crossed the $1 trillion valuation mark, according to the same reporting [7].




