CSOP Asset Management's leveraged single-stock ETF tracking SK Hynix has swelled to $10 billion in assets, making it the world's largest such fund and reigniting debate over whether these products distort the stocks they track.
CSOP Asset Management's 2x leveraged ETF tracking SK Hynix has surpassed $10 billion in assets to become the world's largest single-stock exchange-traded fund, drawing scrutiny over whether rapid inflows into leveraged products are widening volatility in the underlying Korean semiconductor giant.
"Concerns about the fund's rapid growth and potential market distortion are overstated, as its size still represents only a small share of SK Hynix's overall market capitalization and free float," Ding Chen, chief executive officer at CSOP Asset Management, said in an interview.
The CSOP SK Hynix Daily 2x Leveraged Product (07709.HK) recorded turnover of HK$14.6 billion in a single trading session last week, while a sister product tracking Samsung Electronics (07747.HK) saw HK$5.3 billion change hands and closed up 12.62%. CSOP's Hang Seng Tech ETF (03033.HK) also posted turnover exceeding HK$16 billion, reflecting a broader wave of capital flowing into Korea-linked semiconductor and tech products through Hong Kong-listed ETFs.
The explosive growth of leveraged single-stock ETFs raises questions about feedback loops between fund flows and underlying stock prices. For SK Hynix, a linchpin of the global AI supply chain as a key supplier of high-bandwidth memory to Nvidia Corp., large ETF flows could widen daily price swings and complicate price discovery. Regulators in Hong Kong and South Korea are watching closely as the product category expands.
The $10 billion milestone underscores voracious demand for AI-themed investment vehicles offering magnified exposure to semiconductor leaders. SK Hynix has been one of the biggest beneficiaries of the AI boom, with its high-bandwidth memory becoming essential infrastructure for Nvidia's data center graphics processing units. The CSOP product allows investors who cannot directly access the Korean stock market to gain 2x daily exposure to the stock's moves.
Leveraged Products Under the Microscope
Leveraged single-stock ETFs have proliferated globally, with issuers including Direxion, GraniteShares and Leverage Shares launching similar products in the U.S. and Europe. Critics argue these funds can create destabilizing rebalancing flows — particularly during volatile sessions — as the products must adjust their derivatives positions daily to maintain leverage targets. A 2024 study by the European Securities and Markets Authority flagged that leveraged ETFs can amplify intraday volatility in underlying stocks during periods of market stress.
CSOP's Ding countered that the fund's $10 billion in assets represents a fraction of SK Hynix's roughly $100 billion market capitalization and an even smaller portion of its free float. "The idea that a fund of this size could distort a stock with this much liquidity is not supported by the data," he said.
What's Next for Single-Stock ETFs
The product's success has prompted CSOP to expand its leveraged lineup. The firm's 2x Samsung Electronics product has also seen surging volumes, with turnover jumping to HK$5.3 billion last week. Meanwhile, the broader ecosystem is evolving: Futu Holdings Ltd. has launched real-time Korean stock quotes on its trading platforms and is working toward enabling direct Korean equity trading for Hong Kong investors, potentially reducing the need for ETF-based proxies.
For SK Hynix specifically, the ETF's growth creates a new channel of capital flows that could influence the stock's trading patterns. If the fund continues to attract net inflows, its daily rebalancing activity will become an increasingly significant factor in SK Hynix's intraday price action — a dynamic that portfolio managers and risk officers will need to monitor.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.