Entertainment

While K-pop Was Conquering the World, Korea Quietly Turned Its Back

Summary

Overseas stadiums are packed to the brim, yet back home the streaming charts have been slashed in half. There are things K-pop has been missing while it was drunk on its own world domination narrative

Key Points

1

Digital Music Consumption Down 49.7% from 2019 Peak

Domestic K-pop digital music consumption in Korea has plunged to nearly half its 2019 peak level. Year-on-year decline for the top 400 songs stands at 6.4%, while physical album sales fell 9% from 46.7 million to 42.4 million units. Million-sellers dropped from 9 to 7, and not a single release crossed the 3-million mark. This is a clear signal that domestic fandom purchasing power and interest are simultaneously weakening.

2

Overseas Revenue Crosses 60% — A Warning, Not a Celebration

Major entertainment companies now derive more than half their revenue from overseas: HYBE at 63.3%, JYP at 52.2%, YG at 48.6%. Stadium share surged from 0.06% to 10% and tour events quadrupled from 9 to 41. However, overseas touring and marketing costs far exceed domestic activities, creating a structural contradiction where revenue grows but margins shrink.

3

The Paradox of the De-K-pop Strategy

The industry-wide strategy of increasing English lyrics and adopting Western-style production to target global markets is diluting K-pop unique differentiators. Groups like ATEEZ and Stray Kids dominate globally while posting relatively weak chart numbers in Korea. The implicit formula that K-pop only succeeds when it is no longer Korean threatens to erode the genre distinctive identity.

4

Fandom Burnout and the Fandom Should Be Voluntary Movement

Korean MZ-generation fans are growing tired of rapid comeback cycles, bulk album purchasing pressure, streaming rallies, and voting mobilization. A new fan culture norm that fandom should be voluntary is spreading, with sporadic fan boycott movements signaling an active rejection of the industry exploitative structure.

5

The Conditions Behind the $14.88 Billion Market Projection

Morgan Stanley projects the K-pop market will reach $14.88 billion by 2033, but this growth requires fandom sustainability and regional diversity. MiDiA Research warns that K-pop has reached a global bifurcation point where the genre is effectively splitting into domestic and export versions.

Positive & Negative Analysis

Positive Aspects

  • New Revenue Structures Through Global Fan Infrastructure

    Global fan platforms like HYBE Weverse have built direct communication channels with international fans, serving as a launchpad for global entry not just for K-pop but for Korean creators across the board.

  • Potential Evolution into an Asian Pop Culture Hub

    Multinational member lineups are opening the possibility for K-pop to evolve from single-nation music into a hub for Asian pop culture. Idols from Japan, Thailand, Australia, and the US are performing together in increasingly inclusive group configurations.

  • Korea National Brand Value Enhancement

    Overseas K-pop fans learning Korean and visiting the country are creating tangible economic effects in tourism and Korean language education markets, raising Korea soft power and national brand value.

  • $14.88 Billion Market Growth Projection

    According to Morgan Stanley, the K-pop market valued at $9.08 billion in 2025 is projected to grow at a CAGR of 6.36% to reach $14.88 billion by 2033, driven by explosive touring market expansion and Asia-Pacific growth.

Concerns

  • Risk of K-pop Identity Dilution

    English lyrics, Western production, and multinational rosters are making K-pop increasingly indistinguishable from generic global pop. When differentiation disappears, competitiveness in the global market ultimately weakens.

  • Domestic Market Hollowing and Weakened Incubator Function

    A 49.7% drop in digital consumption means Korean listeners have already found alternatives to K-pop. Indie music and international pop are filling the void, and if the domestic market collapses, K-pop incubator function for discovering and testing new idols weakens.

  • Fandom Burnout and Revenue Formula Collapse

    Resistance to bulk album purchasing, streaming rallies, and voting mobilization is spreading. The new norm that fandom should be voluntary is causing entertainment companies existing revenue formulas to malfunction.

  • Gap Between Global Expansion Speed and Cultural Understanding

    As the Belfast K-pop tribute concert incident revealed, cultural understanding lags far behind the speed of K-pop global spread, increasing risks of backlash and cultural clashes.

Outlook

In the short term, K-pop entertainment companies will begin to seriously acknowledge this paradox over the next 6-12 months. Declining domestic revenues will become more pronounced in quarterly earnings, and shareholder questions will shift toward why margins are falling despite growing overseas revenue. In the medium term of 1-3 years, a reverse hybrid strategy is likely to emerge — intentionally restoring Korean identity while maintaining global accessibility. Some fourth-generation groups are already increasing Korean lyrics and incorporating traditional cultural elements. In the long term of 3-5 years, the most intriguing scenario is K-pop evolving into an Asian pop platform, leveraging the K-pop system as infrastructure to elevate Asian talent globally. In the best case, K-pop finds a unique equilibrium between Korean identity and global appeal. In the worst case, it loses its roots entirely and becomes just another competitor in the global pop market.

Sources / References

Related Perspectives

Entertainment

Congrats on 5,022% Streaming Growth — Africa Gets 0.37% of the Money

Afrobeats streaming surged 5,022% between 2021 and 2025, cementing the genre's status as a dominant force in global music alongside K-pop and Latin pop, with Wizkid becoming the first African artist to surpass 11 billion career Spotify streams in early 2026. Despite this explosive cultural momentum, Sub-Saharan Africa's share of the $29.6 billion global recorded music market in 2024 amounted to just $110 million — 0.37% — a figure that barely moved to 0.38% of a $31.7 billion market by 2025. A structural 10x per-stream royalty gap, embedded in Spotify's subscription-price-proportional payout model, means Nigerian artists earn $300–$400 per million streams while the same streams in the United States generate $3,000–$4,000. Three foreign conglomerates — Empire, Sony Music, and Universal Music Group — control 68% of Nigeria's streaming volume, and $286 million in annual music royalties goes unclaimed in Nigeria and Kenya alone due to failed collective management infrastructure. Harvard University's CSASE report, released in December 2025, concluded that the Afrobeats boom is generating revenue almost everywhere except the continent that created it — a structural paradox that time and market growth alone cannot resolve.

Entertainment

Congrats on 5,022% Streaming Growth — Africa Gets 0.37% of the Money

Afrobeats streaming surged 5,022% between 2021 and 2025, cementing the genre's status as a dominant force in global music alongside K-pop and Latin pop, with Wizkid becoming the first African artist to surpass 11 billion career Spotify streams in early 2026. Despite this explosive cultural momentum, Sub-Saharan Africa's share of the $29.6 billion global recorded music market in 2024 amounted to just $110 million — 0.37% — a figure that barely moved to 0.38% of a $31.7 billion market by 2025. A structural 10x per-stream royalty gap, embedded in Spotify's subscription-price-proportional payout model, means Nigerian artists earn $300–$400 per million streams while the same streams in the United States generate $3,000–$4,000. Three foreign conglomerates — Empire, Sony Music, and Universal Music Group — control 68% of Nigeria's streaming volume, and $286 million in annual music royalties goes unclaimed in Nigeria and Kenya alone due to failed collective management infrastructure. Harvard University's CSASE report, released in December 2025, concluded that the Afrobeats boom is generating revenue almost everywhere except the continent that created it — a structural paradox that time and market growth alone cannot resolve.

Entertainment

BBC Pulled the Plug on BTS at the World Cup — Football Tradition? Try European Pride

The 2026 FIFA World Cup Final, scheduled for July 19 at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, will host the first halftime entertainment show in World Cup history, with Madonna, Shakira, and BTS set to perform under the creative direction of Coldplay's Chris Martin. Britain's BBC and ITV have officially declared they will not broadcast the 15-minute performance, choosing instead to air traditional halftime tactical analysis with football legends Alan Shearer and Wayne Rooney. The broadcasters have framed this refusal as a defense of football's European cultural identity against the so-called "Super Bowl-ification" of the world's most-watched sport. However, the actual performing lineup — Colombia's Shakira, South Korea's BTS, and the United States' Madonna — constitutes the most geographically decentralized cultural roster ever assembled for a major international sporting event, directly undermining the "Americanization" framing as a factual mischaracterization. This controversy ultimately reveals something far more significant: Europe's institutional resistance to the reality that cultural authority over football is no longer exclusively European, and that the sport's majority audience now lives well outside the continent that claims to have invented it.

Entertainment

Blame Katy Perry All You Want — The Real Culprit Is Sitting in FIFA's Boardroom

The 2026 FIFA World Cup marks a historic structural departure from 96 years of tournament tradition by staging simultaneous opening ceremonies in three separate host cities — Mexico City, Toronto, and Los Angeles — while introducing the first-ever official halftime show for the championship final, modeled explicitly on the NFL Super Bowl template. While widespread public discourse has centered on Katy Perry's widely criticized LA opening performance, described as a "trainwreck" and "screeching" by social media audiences, individual-level criticism fundamentally misidentifies where the structural problem originates and who bears responsibility for it. The three-city ceremony format, with each city's artist lineup engineered to target a distinct regional advertising demographic, represents not a multicultural celebration but a sophisticated market segmentation strategy designed to multiply commercial inventory across three simultaneously monetizable audiences. The first-ever World Cup final halftime show — featuring Madonna, Shakira, and BTS curated by Coldplay's Chris Martin — directly transplants the Super Bowl entertainment model onto a sport whose rhythms, global viewing scale, and audience composition differ categorically from American football. This piece examines why blaming Katy Perry lets FIFA off the hook, what irreversible precedents the 2026 tournament is establishing for football's long-term identity, and what the road to 2030 looks like when the sport and showbusiness are forced to share equal billing.

Entertainment

Pink Didn't Kill Broadway — The $20M Musicals Nobody's Making Money On Did

The 2026 Tony Awards erupted in unprecedented controversy when pop star Pink hosted the ceremony, performed aerial acrobatics to "Get the Party Started," and sent Broadway purists into collective meltdown over what they called the death of the institution's identity. But the real story isn't who held the microphone — it's why Broadway got desperate enough to make that call at all. This season produced only six eligible original new musicals, less than half the fourteen from the 2019-2020 season, while average production budgets of $15-20 million have failed to recoup costs for three consecutive years, driving a mass exodus of composers, playwrights, and choreographers toward television and film. Jukebox musicals and IP-based adaptations have taken over more than half of Broadway's active stages, replicating the same "sequel-and-remake spiral" Hollywood stumbled into a decade ago — and Broadway is watching it happen without an exit plan. The deeper and more urgent question — whether live performing arts can survive the streaming era without becoming something fundamentally unrecognizable — is one Broadway is rapidly running out of time to answer on its own terms.

SimNabuleo AI

AI Riffs on the World — AI perspectives at your fingertips

simcreatio [email protected]

Content on this site is based on AI analysis and is reviewed and processed by people, though some inaccuracies may occur.

© 2026 simcreatio(심크리티오), JAEKYEONG SIM(심재경)

enko