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    Termination of Homeplus rehabilitation endangers 12,000 workers

    A court decision on Friday to terminate the rehabilitation proceedings for cash-strapped discount store chain Homeplus has raised concerns for the company's 12,000 employees who could lose their jobs. After Homeplus first filed for rehabilitation in March last year, the retailer began reducing its offline outlets. Of the 126 locations, only 67 stores remain, while the number of employees dropped from 20,000 to about 15,000 following the downsizing. After the company sold its supermarket unit Homeplus Express to NS Shopping last month to secure more cash, the workforce dropped again to 12,000 people. If Homeplus ultimately goes into bankruptcy, the government will activate a substitute payment program, which would allow it to advance unpaid wages of up to 21 million won ($13,600) per employee and later recover the funds. Employees who lose their jobs would also be eligible for unemployment benefits equivalent to 60 percent of their average wages over the three months preceding their termination. The government also plans to provide at least 440 billion won in emergency liquidity to help sm

    2 MIN READBy Ko Dong-hwan
    Termination of Homeplus rehabilitation endangers 12,000 workers
  • Banking & Finance

    Toss to face stricter oversight as Korea's first fintech financial conglomerate

    2 MIN READBy Park Han-sol
    Toss to face stricter oversight as Korea's first fintech financial conglomerate
  • Banking & Finance

    Korea's brokerages are raking it in. Their stocks aren't.

    2 MIN READBy Lee Yeon-woo
    Korea's brokerages are raking it in. Their stocks aren't.
  • Tech & Science

    Korea to establish low-Earth orbit communications network by 2035

    2 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Korea to establish low-Earth orbit communications network by 2035
  • Tech & Science

    Korea to establish low-Earth orbit communications network by 2035

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Korea to establish low-Earth orbit communications network by 2035
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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

US trade surplus in service sector remains unaddressed in tariff deal

Korea has struck a tariff deal with the United States in exchange for large-scale investment in the U.S. and the purchase of American energy, but the agreement left Korea’s billions of dollars of chronic loss in the service sector trade unaddressed. President Donald Trump said the U.S. was losing money to Seoul, with Korea seeing a record surplus volume of $118 billion last year, and pressed for a “reciprocal” tariff of 25 percent. On Thursday, the rate was lowered to 15 percent following a series of negotiations. But a breakdown of bilateral trade figures last year shows that Korea suffered a record trade deficit of $7.18 billion in the service sector, according to the Bank of Korea (BOK). The figure was $2.58 billion in 2022 and jumped 2.7 times to $7.04 billion the following year. In the service sector, including royalty payments for intellectual property (IP), research and development (R&D) service, tourism, education and advertising, Korea has been relying excessively on the U.S. For example, following COVID-19's transition to endemic in 2022, explosive demand for tourism and

Aug 1, 2025By Ko Dong-hwan
US trade surplus in service sector remains unaddressed in tariff deal
Companies

Businesses push back against 'anti-business' bills following tariff deal

Business circles are stepping up their opposition to what they call "anti-business" bills — the additional amendment to the Commercial Act and the revision to the Trade Union and Labor Relations Adjustment Act — following Korea's pledge to invest $350 billion in the United States under the Korea-U.S. tariff agreement, industry officials and politicians said Friday. The ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK)-controlled National Assembly passed the first phase of the Commercial Act amendment on July 3, aimed at strengthening minority shareholder rights and curbing the influence of major shareholders. The party is now pushing for a second phase with tougher regulations. It is also advancing the “yellow envelope law” by revising the Trade Union and Labor Relations Adjustment Act to give subcontracted workers greater bargaining power and restrict companies from claiming damages caused by strikes. Business groups are strongly opposing the bills, saying they infringe on management rights. They also argue the proposals conflict with the Lee Jae Myung administration’s pledge to pursue

Aug 1, 2025By Jun Ji-hye
Businesses push back against 'anti-business' bills following tariff deal
Business

Gov't holds emergency meeting to discuss impact of US tariff on copper imports

The Seoul government held an emergency meeting Friday to devise response measures to the United States' new 50 percent tariffs on imported copper, the industry ministry said. The Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy met with officials from Korean companies that export copper-related products, including LS Metal and Poongsan Corp., to assess the impact of the fresh U.S. tariff measure, which took effect earlier in the day. Starting Friday, the Donald Trump administration levied 50 percent duties on imports of semi-finished copper products, such as copper pipes, wires, rods, sheets and tubes, as well as copper-intensive derivative products, such as pipe fittings, cables, connectors and electrical components. To help minimize the impact of the tariffs, the Korean government submitted an official opinion reflecting the domestic industry's concerns over copper tariffs to the U.S. in April and devised measures to help Korean copper companies maintain their competitiveness, according to the ministry. The ministry said it plans to come up with additional support measures for the local companie

Aug 1, 2025By Yonhap
Gov't holds emergency meeting to discuss impact of US tariff on copper imports
Companies

US Navy secretary visit to Hanwha Philly Shipyard helps tariff deal

U.S. Secretary of the Navy John Phelan and Director of the Office of Management and Budget Russell Vought visited Hanwha Philly Shipyard shortly before Seoul and Washington announced their agreement on “reciprocal” tariffs, playing a key role in lowering the levy on Korean imports to 15 percent from the proposed 25 percent. According to Hanwha Group Friday, Phelan and Vought visited Hanwha Philly Shipyard on Wednesday (local time) and toured key production sites with Hanwha Group Vice Chairman Kim Dong-kwan and Philly Shipyard CEO David Kim. They held in-depth discussions on ways to strengthen Korea-U.S. cooperation in the shipbuilding industry. The visit came after Korea proposed the so-called “Make American Shipbuilding Great Again” (MASGA) project, a $150 billion investment initiative aimed at construction of new shipyards in the United States, training American shipyard workers, rebuilding supply chains related to shipbuilding and the maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) of U.S. vessels. After the visit to the Philly Shipyard, President Donald Trump announced a tariff agre

Aug 1, 2025By Nam Hyun-woo
US Navy secretary visit to Hanwha Philly Shipyard helps tariff deal
Companies

Hyundai Motor CEO hails Korea-US tariff deal

Hyundai Motor Company CEO Jose Munoz on Friday praised the tariff agreement between Korea and the United States, saying the deal will reinforce Hyundai’s localization strategy and collaboration between its operations in the two countries. Munoz wrote on LinkedIn that the deal, which was announced a day earlier to lower tariffs on Korean auto imports to the U.S. to 15 percent, provides “clarity and predictability for our business moving forward.” “This framework reinforces our localization strategy while maintaining the seamless collaboration between our Korean design, engineering, and manufacturing teams and our American manufacturing operations,” he wrote. “It's exactly the kind of predictable environment that allows us to execute our long-term plans.” In March, Hyundai Motor Group announced it will invest $21 billion in the U.S. by 2028, in what appeared to be a preemptive move to cushion the impact from U.S. auto tariffs. The Trump administration initially proposed a 25 percent tariff on Korean manufactured vehicles, but lowered it as part of the two countries’ agreem

Aug 1, 2025By Nam Hyun-woo
Hyundai Motor CEO hails Korea-US tariff deal
Tech & Science

Naver partners with Tabelog to offer restaurant search in Japan

Naver has partnered with Tabelog, Japan’s leading restaurant review and reservation platform, to offer a deeper local gourmet experience. The internet giant announced Friday that the two companies signed an agreement to integrate Tabelog’s database into the Naver Place service, offering restaurant information in Japan and a direct reservation system for some of these restaurants. Tabelog provides information on approximately 880,000 establishments across Japan, including reviews and ratings from customers. Naver will use Tabelog’s extensive database to allow users to search for lists of restaurants in major travel destinations or for a specific restaurant by name to view detailed information, including location, hours, menu, price and photos. It will also offer information that is typically hard to find, such as mobile payment availability, in Korean. “This partnership with Tabelog is a strategic move to strengthen the Place search experience while traveling in Japan,” Choi Ji-hoon, Naver Place search and contents head, said in a press release. “We will continue to enhance the

Aug 1, 2025By Lee Gyu-lee
Naver partners with Tabelog to offer restaurant search in Japan
Banking & Finance

Seoul shares sharply down late Friday morning following US tariff deal, tax reform proposal

Korean stocks traded markedly lower late Friday morning, as investors assessed the impact of the Donald Trump administration's new tariff scheme on industry, as well as a new proposal by Seoul to raise taxes on companies and stock investors. The benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) shed 93.92 points, or 2.89 percent, to 3,151.52 as of 11:20 a.m. The index opened lower, tracking overnight losses on Wall Street, and extended losses further on heavy foreign and institutional selling. The latest trade deal, announced Thursday, calls for lowering the U.S.' reciprocal tariffs on South Korean imports to 15 percent from the initially proposed 25 percent. The new levies would affect Korea's auto, steel and other major sectors, and are expected to weigh on its exports, according to experts. U.S. President Trump signed an executive order that sets new tariffs to go into effect next Thursday. Also affecting investor sentiment is the Korean government's proposal of higher taxes on companies and stock investors. The finance ministry proposed raising corporate tax rates across all brackets

Aug 1, 2025By Yonhap
Seoul shares sharply down late Friday morning following US tariff deal, tax reform proposal
Tech & Science

Sphere Corp. signs $1 bil. supply deal for SpaceX

Sphere Corporation, a Korean supply chain management company specializing in aerospace-grade special alloys, said Friday that it has signed a $1 billion supply deal with Elon Musk’s SpaceX. According to the company’s regulatory filing, it signed the deal on Thursday to supply high-performance special alloys such as nickel and superalloys for 10 years to SpaceX, through the end of 2035. The deal also includes an option to extend the contract for up to three additional years after its expiration. Based on the confirmed contract volume for 2026 of $55.48 million, the total amount SpaceX is expected to purchase from the company is estimated at $1.05 billion, Sphere said. Sphere said the supply volume could increase further, in line with the growing number of SpaceX rocket launches in the coming years. In May, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration approved an increase in the maximum number of annual launches of SpaceX’s Starship from five to 25, paving the way for a large-scale expansion of its launch program. Since 2023, Sphere has been supplying special alloy materials used in key

Aug 1, 2025By Nam Hyun-woo
Sphere Corp. signs $1 bil. supply deal for SpaceX
Tech & Science

AI platform WRTN forms strategic partnership with NPU maker FuriosaAI

Artificial intelligence (AI) service platform WRTN said Friday it has formed a strategic partnership with FuriosaAI, an AI accelerator maker gaining international attention with its proprietary neural processing units (NPUs). According to WRTN, the two sides agreed to form the partnership with the goal of building high-performance, energy-efficient inference infrastructure and facilitating the real-world adoption of AI technology. Both companies are promising Korean AI startups. WRTN, which surpassed 5 million monthly active users last year, is one of the largest Korean AI service platforms, and successfully closed its Series B funding after raising 108 billion won ($77.13 million). FuriosaAI is emerging as a strong alternative to Nvidia in the inference sector, backed by its globally recognized NPU technologies. Recently, FuriosaAI announced that it will supply its RNGD accelerators for powering LG AI Research’s EXAONE foundational AI models, and closed its Series C funding round after raising $125 million. Through the partnership, WRTN plans to upgrade its service infrastructure to d

Aug 1, 2025By Nam Hyun-woo
AI platform WRTN forms strategic partnership with NPU maker FuriosaAI
Banking & Finance

Seoul shares open markedly lower on tech losses after tariff deal

Korean stocks opened sharply lower Friday, led by major tech losses, as investors assessed the impact of the Donald Trump administration's new tariff scheme on the industry. The benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) lost 57.84 points, or 1.78 percent, to 3,187.60 in the first 15 minutes of trading. On Thursday, Korea and the United States reached a trade deal that calls for lowering reciprocal tariffs on Korean imports to 15 percent from the initially proposed 25 percent in return for massive investments. U.S. President Trump signed an executive order that sets new tariffs to go into effect next Thursday. But the U.S. has yet to clinch a tariff deal with several partner nations, including Canada and India. Investor sentiment also remained weak as the purchasing managers' index of China showed weaker than expected economic activity. Overnight, U.S. stocks fell as investors remained cautious about Trump's tariff deadline for some of its trading partners while awaiting major corporate earnings reports. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 0.7 percent, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq

Aug 1, 2025By Yonhap
Seoul shares open markedly lower on tech losses after tariff deal
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