my timesThe Korea Times

Economy

PolicyCryptocurrencyOthers
  • Economy

    Gov't wary of chip boom liquidity spilling into housing market

    Policymakers are growing increasingly concerned that a wave of liquidity generated by the ongoing semiconductor boom could spill over into Korea's already overheated housing market, fueled by record-high bonus payouts and low-interest employee loans at Samsung Electronics and SK hynix. Industry estimates suggest that bonus payouts and employee housing loan programs at the two chipmakers could unleash as much as 53 trillion won ($34.6 billion) in liquidity by next year, raising worries about further pressure on the housing market. The figure includes about 23 trillion won in bonus-related cash and more than 30 trillion won in low-interest housing loans available to employees. The estimates come as both companies prepare to roll out large bonus packages driven by the global artificial intelligence-driven semiconductor boom. SK hynix, which allocates 10 percent of its annual operating profit to employee bonuses, is expected to set aside about 26 trillion won for incentive payments based on forecasts that it will post an operating profit of 260 trillion won this year. The company also offers

    3 MIN READBy Lee Hyo-jin
    Gov't wary of chip boom liquidity spilling into housing market
  • Economy

    Exports up 60% in first 20 days of June on robust chip sales

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Exports up 60% in first 20 days of June on robust chip sales
  • Economy

    Seoul shares open lower amid Iran peace talks uncertainty

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Seoul shares open lower amid Iran peace talks uncertainty
  • Economy

    KEPCO to keep electricity rates frozen for Q3 amid financial troubles

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    KEPCO to keep electricity rates frozen for Q3 amid financial troubles
  • Policy

    Contribution2025 Economic Census to elevate Korea's industrial mapping

    2 MIN READBy Ahn Hyung-jun
    2025 Economic Census to elevate Korea's industrial mapping
Korea Times
About Us
Introduction
History
Contact Us
Products & Services
Subscribe
E-paper
RSS Service
Content Sales
Site Map
Policy
Code of Ethics
Ombudsman
Privacy Policy
Youth Protection Policy
Terms of Service
Copyright Policy
Family Site
Hankookilbo
Dongwha Group
FacebookXYoutubeInstagram
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.

Read more

Economy

Financial Services Commission rejects request from banks

Financial Services Commission Chairman Koh Seung-beom, right, speaks during a government-ruling party meeting at the National Assembly in Seoul, Wednesday. YonhapBy Lee Min-hyungThe Financial Services Commission (FSC) has virtually rejected a request from commercial banks and pushed ahead with the extension of a special COVID-19 financial program that waives principal and interest obligations for small business owners and the self-employed who took out loans.Under the program, small business owners and the self-employed who have been directly affected by the prolonged pandemic shock have been able to receive financial benefits by receiving loans from banks without paying any principal and interest until the end of September.Banks have so far argued that beneficiaries of the program should at least pay interest after the deadline to help lenders identify those at risk of insolvency. The financial industry underscored the need to do so in a preemptive manner, as this is an effective step for them to manage possible post-pandemic risks caused by so-called “zombie firms” ― fi

Sep 15, 2021By Lee Min-hyung
Financial Services Commission rejects request from banks
Economy

Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley reportedly handling Yanolja's US listing

Yanolja's headquarters in Seoul / Courtesy of YanoljaMirae Asset, Samsung Securities likely to lose underwriter statusBy Park Jae-hyukGoldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have reportedly been selected as underwriters for Yanolja's initial public offering (IPO), fueling expectations among investors that the hotel booking app operator intends to list itself on the U.S. stock market.According to industry sources and media reports, Wednesday, the Korean company recently decided to hire the two banking giants, without sending requests for proposals to other securities firms.The decision has been widely viewed as a preparatory step to Yanolja's debut on Nasdaq in 2023.Yanolja has not ruled out the possibility of selecting a single foreign brokerage as an additional IPO underwriter, since it hired Mirae Asset Securities as the lead underwriter and Samsung Securities as a co-underwriter last November for its listing on the Seoul bourse by 2022.Morgan Stanley has been expected to team up with Yanolja sometime this year, because the former played a key role in helping the latter attract a combined

Sep 15, 2021By Park Jae-hyuk
Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley reportedly handling Yanolja's US listing
Economy

Job growth slows in Aug. amid resurgence of COVID-19

gettyimagesbankSouth Korea reported job additions for the sixth straight month in August, but the growth pace slowed as employment at in-person service sectors was hit by the fourth wave of the pandemic, data showed Wednesday.The number of employed people reached 27.6 million last month, 518,000 more than a year earlier, according to the data compiled by Statistics Korea.The August additions were lower than an on-year increase of 542,000 the previous month.The country has reported job growth since March amid an economic recovery and due to last year's low base effect.But the job growth slowed for the fourth straight month in August as the latest flare-up in COVID-19 cases and the toughest-ever virus curbs dealt a blow to employment in face-to-face service segments.South Korea has applied Level 4 social distancing rules, the highest in its four-tier scheme, in the greater capital area for about two months.The statistics agency said the fourth wave of the pandemic dented jobs in the in-person service sector, but the country's job market still extended its recovery momentum.The number o

Sep 15, 2021
Job growth slows in Aug. amid resurgence of COVID-19
Economy

Fintechs cry foul over stricter rules on product promotion

gettyimagesbankBy Lee Kyung-min Fintech firms are criticizing the financial authorities' recent measures to limit their entry into the insurance sales business, pointing to the absurdity of the hastily arranged requirements to clarify the structure of their business models by Oct. 15. This is the latest development of the financial regulator's efforts to curb the immense influence and market standing of financial services platforms, notably Kakao Pay, the financial subsidiary of Kakao Corp. and Naver, the country's largest portal operator. The Financial Services Commission (FSC) recently ordered that the two halt services whereby their users were able to buy insurance products recommended via the online platform, a promotional activity the regulator said is prohibited under related laws governing financial consumer protection. Kakao Pay has since suspended services recommending car insurance or offering a list of products it expects users would be interested in. The suspension of the service is leading to an increase in complaints by fintechs whose primary business model is to gener

Sep 15, 2021By Lee Kyung-min
Fintechs cry foul over stricter rules on product promotion
Economy

Naver, Kakao facing uncertainty amid forthcoming regulations

Kim Beom-su, the founder and chairman of Kakao, delivers a speech at the Startup Campus in Pangyo, Gyeonggi Province, May 26, 2016. YonhapBig tech firms hit by increased short-sellingBy Lee Min-hyungNaver and Kakao, two of the nation's largest big tech firms, are at critical moments amid steep stock price falls linked to anxieties over government initiatives to monitor and regulate them, in order to moderate their aggressive business expansions based on the domination of multiple business sectors via their platforms.The liberal ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) and the government have recently stepped up their warnings to the nation's leading internet and mobile platform operators. They argue that the government should not let the platform giants widen their revenue streams at the cost of traditional, offline, self-employed, small business owners.The pressure has put a brake on the two firms' rosy stock growth momentum. Kakao shares have nosedived for the past week, closing at 122,500 won per share Wednesday, down 1.21 percent from a day ago. Naver was also hit hard by the uncer

Sep 15, 2021By Lee Min-hyung
Naver, Kakao facing uncertainty amid forthcoming regulations
  • Traditional small businesses still unsatisfied with Kakao
Economy

Mirae Asset, KB join RE100

KB Financial Group Chairman Yoon Jong-kyoo Korea Times file By Lee Kyung-min Mirae Asset and KB Financial Group have joined “RE100,” the global initiative led by the international non-profit Climate Group in partnership with the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), to help influential businesses commit to 100 percent renewable energy seeking zero-carbon grids on a global scale.This is a first for financial service providers to join the drive taken by large manufacturers thus far.According to Climate Group, the two banking groups were among four Korean firms announcing their commitment to the eco drive, alongside Korea Zinc and SK IE Technology (SKIET), raising the total number of Korean firms to 13. Currently, 324 global companies are participating in RE100, including Google, Microsoft and Apple. In Korea, SK Group was the first to join the initiative last December. Mirae Ass

Sep 14, 2021By Lee Kyung-min
Mirae Asset, KB join RE100
Economy

Fears surrounding short selling escalate again

An electronic board in Hana Bank's dealing room in Seoul shows a slight gain of the benchmark KOSPI, Tuesday morning. YonhapKOSPI unlikely to regain momentum for rallyBy Lee Min-hyungThe increased short selling of Korean stocks has emerged as a major fear factor in the local stock market, amid concerns that such moves will end up restricting any growth momentum in the benchmark KOSPI.After the country's financial regulator partially lifted a ban on the short selling of listed shares in May, foreign and institutional investors have increased their transaction volumes for short selling here.Retail investors cried foul even before the partial resumption of shorting, as it is high-risk trading strategy that bets on the possibility of a stock price fall and is primarily used by foreign and institutional investors.According to data from the Korea Exchange, the daily transaction volume for shorting in the local stock markets between Sept. 1 and 13 reached 451.1 billion won ($385 million) on average, up 8.9 percent from the daily average in August. After the partial resumption of short selli

Sep 14, 2021By Lee Min-hyung
Fears surrounding short selling escalate again
Economy

Kakao's plan to acquire SM Entertainment facing uncertainties

Corporate logos of Kakao and SM Entertainment / Courtesy of each firmBy Lee Min-hyungKakao founder Kim Beom-suThe Fair Trade Commission's anti-trust investigation into Kakao is feared to put the brakes temporarily on the leading mobile platform operator's plans to acquire SM Entertainment.The anti-trust watchdog recently launched the investigation into the headquarters of Kakao and its de facto holding firm, K Cube Holdings, to look into whether the platform giant allegedly violated the fair trade law.This is part of the government's widening regulatory pressure on Kakao. The ruling party and financial watchdog recently sent a repeated and negative message about the firm's platform dominance here.Kakao is in a race to acquire a controlling stake in SM. The platform company is competing with CJ Group and HYBE in a three-way race to acquire the talent management agency.But concerns are surfacing that the latest move by the FTC and other watchdogs against Kakao may restrict the platform's move for a timely closure of the deal. Given a series of escalating regulatory actions from authori

Sep 14, 2021By Lee Min-hyung
Kakao's plan to acquire SM Entertainment facing uncertainties
Economy

Korea braces for possibility of losing Lone Star case

Ministry of Justice's legal affairs bureau chief Lee Sang-gab, fourth from left, speaks during a press conference on the progress of investor-state dispute settlements at the Government Complex Seoul, Tuesday. YonhapUS firm ceases attempts to compromise with gov'tBy Park Jae-hyukThe Korean government is not ruling out the possibility of losing a nine-year-long legal tussle with Lone Star Funds, which could lead to a massive outflow of over $4.6 billion in taxpayers' money to the U.S. private equity firm (PEF) in the worst-case scenario.“It is not easy for us to be 100-percent sure about winning the Lone Star case,” the Ministry of Justice's international dispute settlement division director Han Chang-wan said in a press conference, Tuesday. “In particular, issues regarding the Lone Star case are complex and a great volume of documents and evidence were submitted to the tribunal, so it is difficult to predict the result.”The government was also unclear about when the arbitration decision will be reached, although the final question-and-answer sessions with arbi

Sep 14, 2021By Park Jae-hyuk
Korea braces for possibility of losing Lone Star case
Economy

KDB chief calls for speedy approval for integration of Korean Air, Asiana

Lee Dong-gull, chairman of the Korea Development Bank, speaks during an online press briefing at its headquarters in Seoul, Monday. YonhapKorean Air's acquisition of Asiana Airlines is inevitable to keep the Korean aviation industry afloat in the pandemic era and promptly needs final approval, the head of Korea Development Bank (KDB), Asiana's main creditor, said Monday. Lee Dong-gull, the chairman of the state-run bank, made the remark while Korean Air is waiting for regulatory approval of its 1.8 trillion won ($1.6 billion) acquisition of debt-ridden Asiana.“Integration of Korean Air and Asiana Airlines is inevitable and essential to help the Korean airline industry survive and enhance competitiveness in the global market,” Lee said in an online press briefing. “I hope the (local authority) will approve the deal as soon as possible.”Korean Air has received approvals from regulators in Thailand, Taiwan and Turkey, and still needs nods from six other countries, including Korea, the United States, China, Japan, Turkey and Vietnam, as well as the European Union.

Sep 13, 2021
KDB chief calls for speedy approval for integration of Korean Air, Asiana
previous page
784785786787788
next page

Most Read in Economy