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  • Companies

    Tesla tops imported car sales in Korea in H1

    U.S. electric vehicle (EV) maker Tesla was the best-selling imported passenger car brand in Korea in the first half of this year, capturing 30 percent of the market, industry data showed Friday. According to the Korea Automobile Importers & Distributors Association (KAIDA), 184,032 imported passenger cars were newly registered in the January-June period, up 33.2 percent from a year earlier. Tesla topped the list with 56,139 units, accounting for 30.5 percent of total imports. Its market share surged from 13.9 percent a year earlier, while sales soared 192 percent, allowing the U.S. EV maker to overtake German luxury brands. BMW ranked second with a 21.3 percent market share, followed by Mercedes-Benz at 16.2 percent. Both brands saw their shares decline by more than 5 percentage points from a year earlier. Chinese EV maker BYD came in fourth with a 6.3 percent share. In June, 38,059 imported passenger cars were newly registered, up 27.5 percent from a year earlier, driven by strong demand for EVs. The Tesla Model Y Long Range was the best-selling imported model last month with 5,155 units,

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Tesla tops imported car sales in Korea in H1
  • Companies

    Celltrion Q2 operating profit jumps 77% to $278 mil.

    1 MIN READBy Nam Hyun-woo
    Celltrion Q2 operating profit jumps 77% to $278 mil.
  • Companies

    APR, Amorepacific shine in Amazon Prime Day promotion event

    1 MIN READBy Ko Dong-hwan
    APR, Amorepacific shine in Amazon Prime Day promotion event
  • Companies

    LG Energy Solution-Honda JV begins production of ESS battery cells

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    LG Energy Solution-Honda JV begins production of ESS battery cells
  • Banking & Finance

    Shinhan, Kiwoom face probe over JTBC bond sales amid default fallout

    2 MIN READBy Jun Ji-hye
    Shinhan, Kiwoom face probe over JTBC bond sales amid default fallout
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CEO & Publisher: Oh Young-jinDigital News Email: webmaster@koreatimes.co.krTel: 02-724-2114Online newspaper registration No: 서울,아52844Date of registration: 2020.02.05Masthead: The Korea TimesCopyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.

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Companies

InterviewKorea advised to leverage importers' networks to mitigate US trade pressure

The Donald Trump administration has urged its trade partners, including Korea, to import more from the United States. Even after Seoul signed a tariff deal with Washington last month, the U.S. trade deficit with Korea has remained unresolved, which Trump has used to justify his request for Korea to keep exempting U.S. imports from tariffs while his administration levies 15 percent “reciprocal” tariffs on Korean products. To counter ongoing trade pressures, Korea Importers Association (KOIMA) Chairwoman Youn Young-mi advised that the government consider using the personal networks of the association’s members and their buying power. “Importers who think pragmatically can help Korea navigate the superpower that pursues practical diplomacy,” she said in a recent interview with The Korea Times. “Unlike government officials who rotate through departments every few years, businesspeople with longstanding, even family-to-family, ties to their U.S. partners can have deeper conversations.” Just as conglomerate leaders contributed behind the scenes to the latest tariff deal, KOIMA ha

Aug 13, 2025By Park Jae-hyuk
Korea advised to leverage importers' networks to mitigate US trade pressure
Companies

Stellantis Korea unlikely to meet sales target amid declining Jeep, Peugeot demand

Stellantis Korea continues to lose its brand power amid a steep decline in sales of its two flagship brands — Jeep and Peugeot. Local customers' increasingly polarized demand for either premium luxury cars or more price-competitive domestic models has contributed to this trend, according to data and industry officials on Tuesday. This is clouding the carmaker's goal to achieve its earlier target of increasing total sales by up to 30 percent this year by enhancing the identity of the two once-popular brands. Data from the Korea Automobile Importers & Distributors Association showed the number of newly registered Jeep vehicles came in at 929 during the first half of this year, down 35.4 percent from a year earlier. The figure for Peugeot also dropped 21.4 percent to 449 during the same period. Industry officials cited the two brands’ weak hybrid lineups as the key reason for their dwindling sales performance here. Jeep currently offers no hybrid models in the Korean market, while Peugeot has three hybrid options following the latest launch of its 3008 hybrid SUV. However, this has not b

Aug 13, 2025By Lee Min-hyung
Stellantis Korea unlikely to meet sales target amid declining Jeep, Peugeot demand
Companies

Justice or overreaction? President's war on industrial accidents causes stir

Mixed responses are being raised over President Lee Jae Myung's push to reduce what he describes as persistent and preventable workplace fatalities, as the government considers tougher penalties for industrial accidents. During a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Lee reiterated the need for measures to eradicate fatal industrial accidents, while the labor ministry proposed stricter regulations. "Cutting costs at the expense of someone's life is murder by willful negligence," the president said. "Even if we need to amend the relevant laws, it is time to move past being an underdeveloped 'republic of industrial accidents.'" Presidential spokesperson Kang Yu-jung told reporters that Lee ordered ministers to consider imposing heavier fines on companies found responsible for fatal industrial accidents and permanently banning such firms from bidding on publicly funded projects. "The president also ordered ministers to consider giving a large sum of rewards to citizens who report worksites with poor safety management," she said. Earlier that day, police and labor ministry officials carried out a searc

Aug 12, 2025By Park Jae-hyuk
Justice or overreaction? President's war on industrial accidents causes stir
Companies

KOGAS expands mentoring program for slow learners

Korea Gas Corp. (KOGAS) will be expanding its mentorship program for slow learners to help children and teens in the Daegu area with borderline intellectual abilities better adapt to everyday life. The company announced Tuesday that it signed a partnership for the slow learners mentoring program with Kyungpook National University and Ieum Development Support Center the previous day. The term "slow learners" refers to individuals with an IQ between 71 and 84, who are not intellectually disabled, but have cognitive abilities below the average range, causing difficulties in communication, interpersonal relationships and social adaptation. The program was first launched last year and paired local university students with children and teens for one-on-one mentoring to help children boost their cognitive skills, emotional well-being and social relationships through various activities. This year, KOGAS is investing 10 million won ($7,200) in the program to pair 10 student mentors from the university with as the same number of children and adolescents facing learning challenges. “The project, l

Aug 12, 2025By Lee Gyu-lee
KOGAS expands mentoring program for slow learners
Companies

Korean, Vietnamese firms boost ties with 38 MOU signings

Major private and state-run companies of Korea and Vietnam signed dozens of strategic partnerships at the Korea-Vietnam Business Forum in Seoul, Tuesday. The forum took place on the occasion of Vietnam’s Communist Party General Secretary To Lam’s visit to Korea. On Monday, he held a summit with President Lee Jae Myung and agreed to advance bilateral exchanges. Vietnam is the third-largest trading partner of Korea behind China and the United States, while Korea ranks among Vietnam’s top three trading partners as well. The forum brought together 300 business leaders from 47 Korean companies, including Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) Chairman Chey Tae-won, Samsung Electronics President Park Seung-hee, SK Innovation CEO Choo Hyeong-wook, and Lotte Shopping CEO Jung Joon-ho. The Korean government was represented by Prime Minister Kim Min-seok and First Vice Minister of Trade, Industry and Energy Moon Shin-hak. Some 200 Vietnamese delegates, including business representatives from 37 companies, also participated. Notable attendees included Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign

Aug 12, 2025By Ko Dong-hwan
Korean, Vietnamese firms boost ties with 38 MOU signings
Companies

Will GM Korea quell exit rumors with new vehicle production?

General Motors (GM) Korea could localize production of some new strategic vehicles — co-developed with Hyundai Motor — to sustain its operations here amid unceasing rumors about a possible market exit, experts said Tuesday. Last week, the two global carmakers made headlines with their plan to launch five jointly developed new cars for Latin and North America by 2028, though the production site remains undecided. The timeline coincides with the deadline for GM Korea’s “mandatory” business operations under an earlier agreement with the Korean government. In 2018, the government provided 810 billion won ($582.8 million) in exchange for the carmaker’s commitment to maintain operations in Korea through the end of 2028. Auto experts did not rule out the possibility of the company initiating production of some of the new models in Korea. “GM Korea’s operating profit to sales ratio — a key barometer determining profitability of a firm — remains at a high level, so the carmaker’s headquarters may consider an option to localize production for possible hybrid models for its su

Aug 12, 2025By Lee Min-hyung
Will GM Korea quell exit rumors with new vehicle production?
Banking & Finance

Card issuers wary of government's bad bank plan amid rising delinquency rates

Credit card issuers are voicing concerns that the government’s debt relief program, called the bad bank initiative, could further weigh on their profitability as they are already facing higher credit costs due to rising delinquency rates, industry officials said Tuesday. But some in the industry say the plan could aid in clearing nonperforming loans, depending on the cost-sharing arrangements. The state-run Korea Asset Management Corp. is moving forward with plans to set up a bad bank worth 800 billion won ($576 million), aimed at restructuring debt for financially vulnerable individuals. A bad bank is an entity that purchases nonperforming assets or loans at a discounted rate to facilitate their resolution. This initiative focuses on individuals holding unsecured debts of up to 50 million won that have been delinquent for over seven years. Half of the 800 billion won funding — 400 billion won — is expected to come from contributions by financial institutions. The government initially planned for banks to shoulder the full 400 billion won, but later expanded the burden to include se

Aug 12, 2025By Jun Ji-hye
Card issuers wary of government's bad bank plan amid rising delinquency rates
Companies

LG CNS to build AI data center in Vietnam

LG CNS, an information technology affiliate of Korea's LG Electronics, said Tuesday it has signed an agreement to build an artificial intelligence (AI) data center in Vietnam. A memorandum of understanding (MOU) was signed with Vietnam Posts and Telecommunications Group (VNPT) and Korea Investment Real Asset Management Co. on the sidelines of the Korea-Vietnam Business Forum hosted by the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) during a state visit by Vietnam's top leader, To Lam. Under the agreement, the three companies will work together to develop a hyperscale data center in the Southeast Asian country. They will form a working group to expand cooperation in data center infrastructure, including servers, storage and network systems. In addition, LG CNS will collaborate with VNPT in smart engineering sectors, such as smart factories and logistics. VNPT is a state-owned telecom company whose business spans from telecommunications services and cloud computing to smart city solutions.

Aug 12, 2025By Yonhap
LG CNS to build AI data center in Vietnam
Tech & Science

NCSOFT accelerates earnings recovery

Game studio NCSOFT is showing signs of a fast profitability rebound, posting a continued earnings growth for the second quarter of this year. NCSOFT announced Tuesday its consolidated sales and operating profit for the second quarter stood at 382.4 billion won ($275.13 million) and 15.1 billion won. The numbers are up 4 percent and 71 percent year-on-year, respectively. Compared to three months earlier, sales grew 6 percent and operating profit soared 189 percent. The improvements follow a turnaround in the first quarter of this year, after the company posted operating losses throughout the second half of last year — its first operating loss in 26 years. Given that the second quarter is typically an off-season with no major new releases, the results are drawing favorable market responses. PC game sales rose 10 percent from the previous quarter to 91.7 billion won, with its massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) AION posting 13 billion won in revenue, up 53 percent from three months earlier. Mobile game sales grew 6 percent to 219 billion won, as Lineage 2M expanded its

Aug 12, 2025By Nam Hyun-woo
NCSOFT accelerates earnings recovery
Banking & Finance

Foreigners net purchase over $4.8 bil. of Korean stocks, bonds in July

Foreign investment in Korean securities and bonds recorded a net inflow in July amid a positive outlook for U.S. tariff negotiations and the performance of local companies, the central bank said Tuesday. Offshore investors purchased a net $4.83 billion worth of Korean stocks and bonds last month, according to data from the Bank of Korea (BOK). By type, offshore investors net purchased $2.4 billion worth of local stocks while scooping up a net $2.43 billion worth of local bonds. The country has seen a net inflow of foreign capital for three consecutive months since May, though the July figure is slightly lower compared with that of June at $5.08 billion, the BOK noted. "Anticipation that uncertainties surrounding tariff negotiations with the U.S. would ease and the performance of local companies would improve contributed to the foreign capital inflow in the stock market," the BOK said.

Aug 12, 2025By Yonhap
Foreigners net purchase over $4.8 bil. of Korean stocks, bonds in July
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