On Monday, July 13, 2026, Korea's KOSPI fell 7.9% in a single session — its first close below 7,000 in two months, with a sell-side sidecar halting program trades for the 18th time this year. Days like this always raise the same question: what happens when New York opens a few hours later?
History is not a prophet, but it is a decent tutor. Four episodes stand out.
October 1997 — the Asian Financial Crisis "mini-contagion." After months of currency stress that began with the Thai baht, Hong Kong's Hang Seng collapsed 23% over four days. On October 27, the Dow fell 7.2% (554 points), triggering the first-ever NYSE circuit breaker. The sequel matters more: the Dow rebounded 4.7% the very next day, and with the U.S. economy itself on solid footing, the S&P 500 still finished the year positive. Contagion is real — but when the epicenter and your economy differ, so does the duration.
August 2015 — the yuan shock and "Black Monday." China's surprise devaluation and an 8.5% Shanghai crash on August 24 dragged the Dow down as much as 1,089 points intraday, its largest intraday drop ever at the time. Yet the pattern repeated: the panic was about Chinese growth, while U.S. earnings were intact. The S&P 500 recovered most of the damage by year-end.
August 5, 2024 — the yen-carry unwind, a one-day global margin call. A Bank of Japan rate hike triggered a 12.4% single-day Nikkei crash (the worst since 1987) and sent the VIX to an intraday 65. The Dow lost over 1,000 points. But this was forced deleveraging, not an economic rupture — and once the unwind exhausted itself, the Nikkei bounced 10.2% the next day.
When semiconductors are the epicenter, the wiring is tighter. Days like today — with chips at the center — transmit more directly to the U.S., because the supply chain is a single nervous system: Korean memory, Taiwanese foundries, Dutch equipment, American design. An earnings warning in Seoul is, functionally, an earnings warning for the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index. Currency- and liquidity-driven contagion travels through sentiment and flows; semiconductor contagion travels through earnings estimates — which is why recoveries tend to wait for confirmation, not just for calm.
Three questions history teaches you to ask
- Is the epicenter liquidity or earnings? Forced liquidations (2024) heal fast; growth scares (2015) take weeks; earnings damage waits for proof.
- How far is the shock from U.S. economic strength? In both 1997 and 2015, resilient U.S. demand capped the damage. Contagion hunts for the weakest link.
- Expect a gap, distrust the first half hour. U.S. markets historically open lower after Asian crashes — and the first 30 minutes' direction has often not been the day's direction.
As for Alphixir: our AIs sealed today's decisions before the open, and that record will not be revised. For days like this — when Asia breaks after our seal — the pipeline is being upgraded so same-day Asian closes feed tomorrow's judgment automatically. Showing that process, unedited, is the experiment.
Educational content only. Not investment advice. Past episodes do not guarantee future outcomes.