Most Popular
-
1
Korea enters full election mode
-
2
Immigrant woman stabbed to death by Korean husband
-
3
Seoul bus drivers go on general strike, cause morning rush hour delays
-
4
Lee Jong-sup resigns as envoy to Australia
-
5
Yellow dust engulfs S. Korea, advisory alert issued
-
6
Official campaigning kicks off for April 10 elections
-
7
S. Korea to boost support for single-parent families
-
8
Court upholds jail term for man who attempted to murder ex-girlfriend
-
9
Kia EV9 wins world car of year
-
10
Korea misses out on global bond index boost
-
Kospi slumps below 3,000 points for first time in 6 months
South Korea’s key stock index plunged below the 3,000-point threshold Tuesday for the first time in nearly seven months on the back of losses in top-listed firms. The benchmark Kospi tumbled 57.01 points, or 1.89 percent, to close at 2,962.17 points, the lowest closing since March 10, when it marked 2,958.12 points. It was also the first time the index dropped below 3,000 points at the closing bell, when the index closed the session at 2,996.35 on March 24. On the back of high liquidity,
Oct. 5, 2021
-
[Feature] Fractional share trading in S. Korea faces regulatory hurdles
Fractional trading in South Korea will kick off next year, offering retail investors wider access to the nation’s stock market. But the new trading system, if implemented without detailed legal consideration, might cause market disruption among investors, regulators and even legislators, experts say. Some even claim the system might have limited impact in the local stock market for quantitative growth, saying that the market has few “expensive” equity shares that might be sui
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Kakao founder apologizes for controversy over aggressive biz expansion
Kim Beom-su, the founder of South Korean internet giant Kakao Corp., apologized Tuesday over the controversy surrounding the company's rapid expansion in recent years, which some criticize has driven small businesses into a corner. Kakao has faced growing scrutiny from lawmakers and regulators in recent months over the far-reaching influence of its online platform that has been accused of taking business away from mom-and-pop stores. "I am sorry for having caused the controversy," Kim
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Korea’s renewable energy too expensive, shunned by private companies
Local companies have little incentive to migrate to clean energy for their electricity needs, as power prices charged by renewable energy producers and suppliers are still higher than the cost of offsetting carbon emissions. According to Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy data obtained by Rep. Hong Jung-min of the ruling Democratic Party, purchasing electricity generated by renewables is about 50 percent more expensive than offsetting greenhouse gas emissions through buying carbon credit
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Samsung Electronics kicks off wage negotiation with union
Samsung Electronics and its unions held their first wage talks Tuesday at the company’s plant in Yongin, Gyeonggi Province, industry sources said. Samsung‘s management and the unions will continue their negotiations in the following weeks to decide changes to union members’ terms of employment. Unionized workers have demanded a uniform raise in salary by 10 million won ($8,400), plus cash and stock bonuses worth 4.5 million won in total. The union also requests managemen
Oct. 5, 2021
-
S. Korean stock market nosedives to almost 7-month low
South Korean stocks plunged to an almost seven-month low Tuesday, as investor sentiment was weakened by the debt ceiling tussle in the United States and debt crises involving Chinese property developers. The Korean won closed unchanged against the US dollar. The benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index (Kospi) tumbled 57.01 points, or 1.89 percent, to close at 2,962.17 points, the lowest finish since March 10. Trading volume was moderate at about 830 million shares worth some 15.1 trillion wo
Oct. 5, 2021
-
FKI urges Japan’s new Cabinet to lift export restrictions against Korea
Japan’s export restrictions on three key industrial materials critical for South Korea’s chip and display industries has had little impact against the target materials, but worsened overall trade between the two countries, a major business representation group here said Tuesday. Releasing an analysis, the Federation of Korean Industries urged Japan and its new Prime Minister Fumio Kishida to lift the export restrictions the country imposed against Korea in July 2019. According t
Oct. 5, 2021
-
[Newsmaker] Finance minister blasted for failing to curb housing prices
Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki came under fire during a parliamentary inspection on Tuesday for failing to stop the relentless rise in housing prices despite dozens of policy measures implemented in recent months. To address the nationwide outcry over soaring housing prices, the Moon Jae-in administration has introduced 26 sets of real estate policies. The latest centered on raising taxes on owners of multiple homes and rooting out property speculation. But there are signs these policies may ba
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Hahn & Co. eyes W300b in partial exit from secondhand car retailer IPO
South Korea-based private equity firm Hahn & Co. is poised to cash in on 306.6 billion won ($258.1 million) from an initial public offering of a fully-owned secondhand car retailer K Car on Wednesday, according to a prospectus Tuesday. The deal is aimed at floating Hahn & Co.’s 25.5 percent stake, or 12.3 million shares, in K Car, plus 1.2 million new shares. The IPO price of K Car, which is valued at 1.2 trillion won, has been fixed at 25,000 won apiece. Hahn & Co.’s
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Digital transformation drives out bank branches, ATMs: data
Amid the rapid digital transformation brought on by the COVID-19 era, local banks have increasingly turned their backs on brick-and-mortar branches and automated teller machines, data showed Wednesday. The number of physical bank branches stood at 6,326 as of the end of June, down 10.9 percent from the end of 2016, when the figure came in at 7,101, according to data from the market watchdog Financial Supervisory Service submitted to Rep. Yoo Dong-soo of the ruling Democratic Party. Meanwhile,
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Samsung heir stays S. Korea's richest stockholder
Lee Jae-yong, the chief of South Korea's top conglomerate Samsung Group, remains the country's richest stockholder despite a fall in the value of his shareholdings, a corporate tracker said Tuesday. Stock holdings of Lee, vice chairman of global tech titan Samsung Electronics Co., were valued at 14.17 trillion won ($11.9 billion) as of end-September, the largest among local conglomerate owners, according to Korea CXO Institute. Yet the value of his stock holdings was down about 1.39 trillion won
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Online shopping rises 16.8% in Aug. amid pandemic
Online shopping in South Korea grew 16.8 percent from a year earlier on solid demand for food delivery services and foodstuffs amid the protracted pandemic, data showed Tuesday. The value of online shopping transactions stood at 15.8 trillion won ($13.3 billion) in August, compared with 13.5 trillion won the previous year, according to the data from Statistics Korea. The August reading fell from a record high of 16.2 trillion won in July, but the value of online shopping reached more than 15 tri
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Hanjin Heavy bags W311b order for 4 container carriers
South Korean shipbuilder Hanjin Heavy Industries & Construction Co. said Tuesday that it has obtained a 310.5 billion won ($261.4 million) order to build four container carriers. Under the deal with a European shipper, Hanjin Heavy will deliver the vessels by November, 2023, the company said in a regulatory filing. In April, creditors of Hanjin Heavy, led by the state-run Korea Development Bank (KDB), signed a deal with a consortium led by local builder Dongbu Corp. to sell it a 66.85 percen
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Daewoo Shipbuilding gets approval for design of cyber safety solutions for ship
Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering Co. (DSME) said Tuesday that it has won approval for the design of its cyber safety solutions for ships from ABS, a US ship quality assurance and risk management company. The solutions, named DSME Smartship Solutions (DS4), will be used to protect the data and software of ships from outside hacking, the shipbuilder said in an emailed statement. The PDA (product design assessment) approval for the DS4 means the DS4 is designed under the standard for th
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Apple Watch 7 to be launched in S. Korea next week
Apple Inc.'s new smartwatch will be launched in South Korea next week, the US tech titan said Tuesday, as it eyes to beef up its presence on the home turf of its archrival Samsung Electronics Co. Apple Watch Series 7 will be available here from Oct. 15, with preorders starting from Friday, according to the company. Its starting price has been set at 499,000 won ($420). Apple's latest smartwatch features a nearly 20-percent-larger screen and 40-percent-thinner bezel than its predecessor at 1.7 mi
Oct. 5, 2021
-
LG Electronics' innovation group expanded for future growth
LG Electronics Inc. said Tuesday it has expanded its technology discussion group as the company tries to better explore its future growth engines. LG Electronics said its Innovation Council now involves other LG Group affiliates, including South Korea's No. 1 chemical company LG Chem Ltd., telecommunications giant LG Uplus Corp. and IT service arm LG CNS Co. The Innovation Council, a networking group with industry experts, was launched by LG Electronics in July 2020 to seek new business opportun
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Samsung Display continues to dominate smartphone panel market in H1: report
Samsung Display Co., a major display panel maker in South Korea, dominated the global smartphone panel market in the first half of the year, a report showed Tuesday, though its market share declined slightly from a year earlier. Samsung Display, an affiliate of top smartphone maker Samsung Electronics Co., grabbed a 48 percent revenue share in the global smartphone display panel market in the first six months of 2021, down from a 50 percent share a year earlier, according to a report from market
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Regulator to complete review of Korean Air's Asiana takeover deal this year
South Korea's antitrust regulator said Tuesday it plans to complete its review within this year of a deal by Korean Air Lines Co., the country's biggest carrier, to buy the debt-ridden Asiana Airlines Inc. In a report to the National Assembly, the Korean Fair Trade Commission (KFTC) said it plans to speed up the review in consideration of the value that the deal has for the country's economy. In November 2020, Korean Air said it will acquire its smaller rival Asiana Airlines in a deal valued at
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Samsung Electronics, union to have 1st wage talks
Samsung Electronics Co. and its union will have their first wage talks Tuesday as the tech giant is moving to create a healthy labor-management culture following its leader's commitment to scrap the conglomerate's "no labor union" policy. Representatives from Samsung's management and the union will hold the first round of wage talks at its plant in Yongin, 49 kilometers south of Seoul. It will be the first wage negotiations since Lee Jae-yong, the leader of Samsung Group, in May 2020 v
Oct. 5, 2021
-
Seoul stocks open lower on US stock losses
South Korean stocks opened lower Tuesday, as investor sentiment was hurt by overnight losses on Wall Street. The benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index (Kospi) slumped 29.05 points, or 0.96 percent, to 2,990.13 points in the first 15 minutes of trading. Seoul stocks got off to a weak start, falling below the 3,000-point level for the first time in about six months. The Korean stock market closed Monday due to an extended holiday tied to the Oct. 3 National Foundation Day. An impasse over th
Oct. 5, 2021