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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.
  • Companies

    InterviewSelling experiences, not volume, key for Pernod Ricard

    4 MIN READBy Ko Dong-hwan
    Selling experiences, not volume, key for Pernod Ricard
  • Others

    Weak won, K-beauty fuel Chinese shopping trips, spending in Korea

    4 MIN READBy Yulu Ao
    Weak won, K-beauty fuel Chinese shopping trips, spending in Korea
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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

HD Hyundai Infracore wins $67.6 mil. deal to supply K2 engines to arms agency

HD Hyundai Infracore said Tuesday it has won a 92.3 billion-won ($67.6 million) contract from the state-run Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) to supply engines for Korea's K2 battle tanks. Under the agreement, HD Hyundai Infracore will deliver the 1,500-horsepower K2 tank engines in phases through 2028. According to the company, the engine model matches the output of those used in main tanks operated by top global militaries, enabling the 56-ton K2 tank to reach a maximum speed of 70 kilometers per hour. The model uses an advanced turbocharging system for improved power and combustion efficiency, and is designed to reduce vibration and ensure even power distribution. HD Hyundai Infracore succeeded in localizing production of the K2 tank engine in 2014 and has been DAPA's sole supplier of engines for the tank model since 2019. DAPA announced last week that it had secured the second sales agreement of K2 tanks with Poland. The deal is estimated to be worth around 8.8 trillion won. "The contract demonstrates HD Hyundai's defense technology capabilities and reliability," said K

Jul 8, 2025By Yonhap
HD Hyundai Infracore wins $67.6 mil. deal to supply K2 engines to arms agency
Companies

CJ Logistics boosts Crocs warehouse in Shanghai with robotic automation

Major logistics company CJ Logistics has deployed its latest robotic automation system at a global fashion brand’s warehouse in China, reinforcing its competitiveness across the industry. The logistics arm of CJ Group said on Tuesday it has implemented its Mini AGV Assorting System (MAAS) at the Crocs Center in Shanghai. The system uses automated guided vehicles that pick and carry stocked items to the packaging section for each shipment order. Human involvement is limited to packaging the items and preparing them for delivery. The company first introduced the system in February last year at another warehouse for Crocs, an American shoe company, in Icheon, Gyeonggi Province. The company said MAAS greatly increases operational efficiency within the warehouse. Before its introduction, the tasks handled by the system — picking and sorting items — were performed manually by workers. According to CJ Logistics, the system has not only accelerated the process but also reduced errors. The Crocs Center in Shanghai handles not only shoes but also Jibbitz Charms, a brand of accessories specif

Jul 8, 2025By Ko Dong-hwan
CJ Logistics boosts Crocs warehouse in Shanghai with robotic automation
Companies

PHOTO Kia’s EV5 electric SUV

The exterior of Kia’s fifth electric vehicle (EV) – the EV5 – is shown in a promotional image. The carmaker unveiled the design of the mid-size SUV, which is set to go on sale in Korea in the second half of this year, on Tuesday. Kia highlighted the vehicle’s boxy and dynamic silhouette. Courtesy of Kia

Jul 8, 2025By Lee Min-hyung
[PHOTO] Kia’s EV5 electric SUV
Others

Inside KOMIPO’s remote Tanggamus Hydropower Plant in Indonesia

TANGGAMUS, Indonesia — The journey to Korea Midland Power’s (KOMIPO) Tanggamus Hydropower Plant begins at an airport in Lampung Province, Indonesia, a region just an hour’s flight from the country’s capital Jakarta. The final 150 kilometers from there is a two-hour ride over turbulent off-road tracks, traversing remote backcountry where villagers remain largely untouched by urban civilization. The plant sits deep in a mountainous forest accessible only by narrow, dusty roads, and operates two 27.7 megawatt units around the clock for a total of 55.4 megawatts — enough to run 56,000 wall air conditioners for an hour — drawing water from the Semangka River. Operating since 2018 after two and a half years of construction, Tanggamus marks the company’s second hydropower plant following Wampu Hydropower Plant located in the northern part of Sumatra, which opened in 2016 as the first overseas hydropower plant commercially operated by a Korean power company. Unlike traditional dams that rely on dramatic drops to generate power, Tanggamus uses a diversion method, channeling water f

Jul 8, 2025By Lee Gyu-lee
Inside KOMIPO’s remote Tanggamus Hydropower Plant in Indonesia
Companies

InterviewKorea should adopt balanced approach for senior reemployment: Robert Walters

Korea should introduce a more balanced approach to senior reemployment, as their insight and experience can be of significant help in educating a younger workforce and boosting the economy, said Choi Jun-won, country manager of Robert Walters Korea. The view is a commentary on the nation’s weak social perception of elderly workers. Starting this year, Korea entered the early phase of a super-aged society where more than 20 percent of its population is aged over 65, according to data from Statistics Korea. However, the country still sets the legal retirement age at 60, making it difficult for the aged workforce to extend their career beyond that age. Choi, who leads the local subsidiary of the British recruitment firm, underscored the need to change the perception of senior workers for the health of Korean society and companies. “We need to build an institutional framework in a way to benefit both aged and young workers for the sustainable growth of the nation’s labor market,” Choi said during a recent interview with The Korea Times. For instance, senior officials, working as part-

Jul 8, 2025By Lee Min-hyung
Korea should adopt balanced approach for senior reemployment: Robert Walters
Companies

Epic Games drops app store-related antitrust lawsuit against Samsung

The head of U.S. gaming giant Epic Games said Tuesday the company has dropped an antitrust lawsuit against Samsung Electronics involving the blocking of software originating from sources outside of app stores of Google and Samsung on the South Korean tech company's mobile devices. "We're dismissing our court case against Samsung following the parties' discussions. We are grateful that Samsung will address Epic's concerns," Tim Sweeney, chief executive officer (CEO) and founder of Epic Games, said on X, formerly known as Twitter. Epic Games, best known for popular online shooter Fortnite, had filed the lawsuit last year in the U.S. over a feature on Samsung devices that automatically blocks the installation of apps from sources outside the Google Play Store and Samsung's own Galaxy Store. Epic had argued that this mechanism constituted an unfair barrier to competition. Epic users had to download the company's apps from its official website after manually disabling the feature. With the case against Samsung now dropped, Epic is expected to continue its legal dispute against Google alone. T

Jul 8, 2025By Yonhap
Epic Games drops app store-related antitrust lawsuit against Samsung
Companies

Retailers hit home run with baseball-themed merchandise

Merchandise linked to professional baseball is energizing sales across Korea’s department stores and convenience stores, as the sport continues to draw large crowds to stadiums, television screens and online platforms throughout the season. Since the launch of the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) in 1982, the sport has enjoyed steady nationwide popularity, giving rise to a thriving retail market. Capitalizing on this, retailers have rolled out a variety of products inspired by popular teams and players — a strategy that has delivered strong results. With KBO attendance growing at a double-digit pace since 2022, the market outlook remains promising as long as the league maintains fan enthusiasm. Since last year, Hyundai Department Store has hosted pop-up stores themed around each of the KBO’s eight teams, generating a cumulative 2.6 billion won ($1.9 million) in sales over a total of 84 days, an average of 31 million won in daily revenue. That figure is 55 percent higher than the average daily sales of fashion brand pop-ups. In May, The Hyundai Seoul’s flagship store in Yeouido

Jul 8, 2025By Ko Dong-hwan
Retailers hit home run with baseball-themed merchandise
Companies

Samsung Electronics to repurchase $2.85 bil. worth of treasury stocks

Samsung Electronics said Tuesday it will repurchase 3.9 trillion won ($2.85 billion) worth of treasury stocks to improve shareholder value and provide compensation to its employees. At its board meeting, the company decided to retire around 56.89 million common stocks and 7.83 million preferred shares, based on the previous day's closing prices of 61,700 won and 51,300 won, respectively, according to the company in a regulatory filing The buyback will take place from Wednesday through Oct. 8. Of the total, 2.8 trillion won worth of shares will be canceled to boost shareholder value, while the remaining 1.1 trillion won will be allocated for employee bonuses, the company said. The latest repurchase completes Samsung Electronics' plan announced in November to buy back a total of 10 trillion won worth of its own shares over a one-year period. As the first step, the company bought back 3 trillion won worth of shares in November and canceled the entire amount three months later. In February, it repurchased another 3 trillion won in shares, of which 2.5 trillion won was designated for cancellati

Jul 8, 2025By Yonhap
Samsung Electronics to repurchase $2.85 bil. worth of treasury stocks
Companies

Samsung Electronics estimates 56% drop in Q2 operating profit on chip slump, US trade policies

Samsung Electronics on Tuesday estimated its second-quarter operating profit plunged 55.9 percent from a year earlier due to sluggish chip business and the fallout from U.S. trade policies, missing market expectations. The world's biggest maker of memory chips expected an operating profit of 4.59 trillion won ($3.4 billion) for the quarter ending in June, sharply down from 10.44 trillion won a year earlier, according to an earnings guidance released by Samsung Electronics. From the previous quarter, operating profit sank 31.2 percent from 6.69 trillion won. The operating profit was 23.4 percent lower than the average estimate, according to a survey by Yonhap Infomax, the financial data firm of Yonhap News Agency. Revenue edged down 0.1 percent to 74 trillion won. The data for net earnings was not available. In a separate release, Samsung Electronics attributed the sharp on-quarter decline in profit to inventory replenishments and the impact of the U.S. ban on exports of advanced AI chips to China. For the upcoming quarter, Samsung Electronics expects a rebound in demand and sales of premiu

Jul 8, 2025By Yonhap
Samsung Electronics estimates 56% drop in Q2 operating profit on chip slump, US trade policies
Companies

InterviewWhy Korean firms struggle to become global players

Many Korean companies aspire to expand overseas, but relatively few succeed. According to a 2024 survey by the Ministry of SMEs and Startups, only 26.1 percent of venture companies were exporters. Among them, just 21.1 percent had established a physical presence abroad. Large conglomerates and financial holding companies more frequently expand into other countries, but gaining recognition as a global brand is a different story. Klaus Wehage, CEO of 10X Innovation Lab and chief strategy officer of Global Copilot, said the challenge is significant when a company’s mindset has been shaped entirely around the Korean market. "How do you transition from being a very successful market leader in Korea to becoming a global market leader?" Wehage said in a recent video interview with The Korea Times. "You have to reengineer the organization. And part of that is also reengineering your own mindset as a leader. Very few Korean founders or CEOs are able to do that effectively. That's why, in my view, the success rate for Korean companies remains relatively low." Wehage is a serial entrepreneur and st

Jul 8, 2025By Lee Yeon-woo
Why Korean firms struggle to become global players
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