Common Principle
Whatever profile is chosen, one principle holds across all three. Think at the node level, not the country level. "Should I invest in Korea or Taiwan?" is not the question. "Which node is indispensable?" is the question. An indispensable asset does not sink even on the waves of geopolitics.
Basket 1: Conservative Approach
Place proven monopoly assets — ASML, TSMC — at the center, and secure stability through Singapore financial equities and data center REITs. Hold 10–15% of the portfolio in cash or short-term U.S. Treasuries to preserve re-entry capacity under geopolitical shock.
- Core assets: nodes with verified technological monopoly and temporal moat
- Geopolitical hedge: Singapore (institutional platform) + U.S. Treasuries (safe haven)
- Scenario response: defensive across both Managed Competition and Sharp Decoupling
Basket 2: Balanced Approach
Mix proven monopoly assets with Korean Indispensable Node assets — SK hynix, LG Energy Solution, Samsung Biologics. Add regional diversification through Israeli cybersecurity companies and Indonesian nickel-linked assets. This profile captures the largest upside in a scenario where the Korea Discount resolves.
- Core assets: global monopoly nodes + Korean indispensable assets (HBM, all-solid-state battery, CDMO)
- Geopolitical hedge: Israel (security-innovation pipeline) + Indonesia (resource node)
- Scenario response: optimal under Managed Competition; excess returns possible on Korea Discount resolution
Basket 3: Aggressive Approach
A direct bet on the Korea Discount resolution itself. If Samsung Electronics' P/E moves from 10 to 15 alone, that is a 50% share-price gain. Front-running all-solid-state battery commercialization and riding the HBM4 mass-production cycle also belong to this profile.
- Core assets: Korea Discount resolution beneficiaries + technology-transition leading assets
- Catalysts: MSCI Developed Markets Index inclusion, Corporate Value-up Program execution, NPS shareholder rights activism
- Scenario response: risk concentrates if institutional reform does not accompany — the institutional flexibility score of 2.5 from Chapter 16 is this basket's single largest variable
Scenario-Based Basket Adjustments
Managed Competition (60–70% probability): All three baskets hold their base configuration. The highest-probability scenario for the gradual re-rating of Korean assets.
Sharp Decoupling (15–25% probability): Raise the cash/Treasury allocation in the Conservative basket to 20%. In the Balanced basket, reduce exposure to assets with high China linkage. In the Aggressive basket, concentrate on foundry substitution demand beneficiaries.
Selective Re-engagement (10–20% probability): The scenario in which Korea's value as the "in-between node" is maximized. Increase the Korean asset weighting in both the Balanced and Aggressive baskets.
This basket is a structural analysis based on the indispensability framework, and is not a buy/sell recommendation for any specific security. Specific investment decisions depend on each individual's risk tolerance and investment horizon.