Articles by Park Han-na
Park Han-na
hnpark@heraldcorp.com-
BOK chief says stock markets rise at 'very fast clip'
Bank of Korea Gov. Lee Ju-yeol on Friday expressed concerns about the stock market’s recent rally, warning retail investors that their debt-backed equity buying spree could lead to big losses. The country’s benchmark Kospi has been on a bullish run since November, setting record highs last week when the market closed above the 3,000 mark on Jan. 7 for the first time in its 38-year history. Individual investors have continued to snap up shares amid record-low interest rates and abun
Economy Jan. 15, 2021
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South Korean job losses hit 22-year high amid pandemic
South Korea’s economy last year suffered its worst year for job losses in 22 years, as companies of all sizes struggled to keep employees in the face of the prolonged pandemic, data showed Wednesday. According to Statistics Korea, the number of employed people here came to 26.9 million last year, down 218,000 from a year earlier, as hotels and restaurants slashed employment. The largest annual job loss on record was 1.27 million jobs in 1998, when the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis took
Economy Jan. 13, 2021
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Retail investors unnerved by plan to lift ban on short-selling
Concerns over the government‘s announcement that it would end a temporary ban on short-selling rose among retail investors Tuesday, as they claim that the reactivation of such trading practice could create market disruptions. The Financial Services Commissions said it would end the prohibition on the trading strategy that makes a negative bets on stocks on March 15, as planned. The ban was imposed to prevent market volatility in the aftermath of COVID-19 pandemic in March last year for
Market Jan. 12, 2021
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Seoul will actively pursue CPTPP: finance minister
The South Korean government will actively consider joining the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, or CPTPP, and improve systems to engage in the new global trading order evolving in the region, its fiscal chief said Monday. Stressing that megasized free trade pacts such as the Asia-Pacific agreement will become foundations for changes in the global economic order, Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki said the government will begin unofficial talks with member countri
Economy Jan. 11, 2021
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Finance Ministry vows to beef up monitoring of excess liquidity
Vice Finance Minister Kim Yong-beom vowed on Thursday to strengthen monitoring on swelling of liquidity spilled over to the country’s asset markets amid concerns over the stock market’s sharp pandemic-era rally. Buoyed by fiscal stimulus and relief packages provided during the COVID-19 crisis management procedure, the abundant liquidity has flown into the stock and real estate markets to the point where the government is beginning to worry whether the real economy could catch up.
Economy Jan. 7, 2021
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Government to spend over W26tr on housing stabilization
The government will spend over 26 trillion won ($23.9 billion) to develop new towns and build infrastructure in the first half of the year in a bid to curb soaring housing prices, the Finance Ministry said on Wednesday. Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki unveiled detailed plans for a government-led 110 trillion won investment project program that will be carried out throughout the year by public agencies, state-run firms and private companies. “The investment project will center on housing s
Economy Jan. 6, 2021
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Minister urges financial firms to funnel funds into new growth engines
Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki on Tuesday called for banks and other financial firms to channel more funds into sectors like green cars and biotechnology to help the virus-hit economy come back strong. The country’s top economic policymaker underlined the importance of the financial industry’s role in helping the nation‘s economy rebound this year and moving toward becoming a pacesetting economy. “There is abundant liquidity in the market. But inflows into future growth
Economy Jan. 5, 2021
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S. Korea targets 3.2% growth, housing market stabilization in 2021
Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki on Monday reiterated the government’s commitment for economic growth of 3.2 percent this year and stressed its drive to stabilize soaring housing price at the same time. Urging ministry officials to prepare for structural changes in the post COVID-19 era, Hong vowed to make all-out efforts to achieve the target of a 3.2 percent economic growth and to create 150,000 additional jobs this year. “We must promote domestic consumption as much as possible un
Economy Jan. 4, 2021
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Consumer prices grew 0.5 % in 2020
South Korea‘s consumer price inflation hovered below 1 percent this year for the second consecutive year, data showed Thursday. According to data by Statistics Korea, the consumer price index stood at 105.42 in 2020, up 0.5 percent from a year earlier. In 2019, the index rose 0.4 percent. Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and oil prices, grew 0.4 percent in 2020, the lowest since a 0.2 percent fall in 1999. It marks the first time annual inflation has stayed below 1 percent
Economy Dec. 31, 2020
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S. Korea unveils W9.3tr virus relief program to help small biz, freelancers
South Korea has unveiled the third batch of its economic relief package worth 9.3 trillion won ($8.49 billion) to support the country‘s small businesses and contract workers hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic, amid growing fears of a virus resurgence and its impact on slowing down the economic recovery. Under the government plan, some 5.8 million people will benefit from the aid program. Direct cash payments will begin Jan. 11. A swift economic recovery and finding a solution to inequal
Economy Dec. 29, 2020
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Number of corporate credit rating cut hits highest level in 4 years
The number of South Korean companies that have suffered credit rating downgrades has reached its highest level since 2016 as the COVID-19 pandemic has taken a toll on their finances this year, industry data showed Monday. The debt ratings of 39 companies have been cut down by more than one of the three local credit rating agencies -- Korea Investors Service, NICE Investors Service and Korea Ratings Corporation -- as of Thursday, according to data compiled by Yonhap Infomax. In 2016, the figur
Economy Dec. 28, 2020
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COVID-19 phenomenon: Year-end parties go online
As the year draws to a close, many people are navigating rules made necessary by the pandemic as they try to mark the end of a challenging 2020, with restaurants closing early and colleagues working from home. Alarming new daily cases of COVID-19 have dashed hopes that the drastic changes the virus brought to the way people live, work and socialize would get back to normal by the end of this year, resulting in series of cancellation of plans for holiday get-togethers. Seven in 10 South Korean
Social Affairs Dec. 28, 2020
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30% of COVID-19 relief funds spent on boosting consumption: KDI
Around 30 percent of the COVID-19 relief funds universally handed out by the government in May were spent to boost sluggish domestic consumption, with the rest used for debt payments or savings, a state-run think tank said Wednesday. According to a report released by the Korea Development Institute, some 4 trillion won ($3.65 billion) has been spent through credit and debit cards, accounting for between 26.2 percent and 36.1 percent of an estimated 11.1 trillion to 15.3 trillion won granted by
Economy Dec. 23, 2020
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Government to supply 460,000 housing units in 2021
Finance Minister Hong Nam-ki said Tuesday that the government will provide 460,000 housing units next year, while strengthening monitoring on manipulation attempts in the real estate market. “If the plan is implemented without any hitches, we expect it will help stabilize the market as (we are set to) supply more new homes than the average amount,” Hong said during a meeting on the real estate market with the chiefs of related ministries at the Seoul Government Complex. Over
Economy Dec. 22, 2020
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South Korea mobilizes Army, police to ramp up COVID-19 contract tracing
Hundreds of Army and police personnel will be dispatched to break the chain of infection of the novel coronavirus, which has seen an average of more than 600 cases diagnosed each day over the past week here. Despite the government’s stronger social distancing measures implemented from earlier this week, cases have continued to grow daily with no signs of abating. Sharp upticks in new cases, which began in mid-November and centered on Seoul and surrounding areas, have drawn concerns t
Social Affairs Dec. 11, 2020
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