Journalist

Lee Jung-woo
  • HOT STOCK: Hyosung Heavy flies to rank as most expensive KOSPI stock
    HOT STOCK: Hyosung Heavy flies to rank as most expensive KOSPI stock SEOUL, November 06 (AJP) - The most expensive stock on Korea’s main bourse is no longer Samsung Electronics or Hyundai Motor, but Hyosung Heavy Industries — trading at 2.3 million won ($1,591) per share and cementing its position as the priciest KOSPI-listed company. The stock has surged 462.6 percent this year as of Tuesday, making it the top performer on a KOSPI that itself has jumped 72 percent year-to-date. Hyosung Heavy manufactures core power-grid equipment such as extra-high-voltage transformers. Its share-price explosion is fueled by soaring global investment in electricity transmission infrastructure amid the artificial intelligence (AI) boom, which is driving unprecedented demand for stable, high-capacity power systems. A major subsidiary of Hyosung Group, the company sits within a conglomerate founded by Cho Hong-jai, who once partnered with Samsung’s founder Lee Byung-chul. The group’s historical ties place Hyosung within Korea’s wider Samsung-origin family network. Investors are increasingly betting on a stock split to make the seven-digit share price more accessible to retail traders. A split reduces the face value and multiplies the number of outstanding shares, lowering the trading price per share while preserving market capitalization. Samsung Electronics undertook a 50-for-1 split in 2018 when its shares exceeded 2.5 million won. Hyosung Heavy has received inquiries from shareholders but says no specific plan is under review. Last Friday, Hyosung Heavy reported a preliminary consolidated operating profit of 219.8 billion won ($152 million) for the July–September quarter, up 97.3 percent from a year earlier. Eleven securities firms subsequently raised their target prices. NH Investment & Securities and Hana Securities both set their targets at 3 million won per share. Based on current outstanding shares, this implies a market capitalization of about 27.97 trillion won. NH Investment & Securities cited the company’s strong position in U.S. utility upgrades and tight supplier dominance, projecting improved profitability from rising North American and European demand. The firm raised its target from 1.5 million won to 3 million won. Shinhan Investment & Securities offered a similar view, expecting the stock to reach 3 million won in the mid- to long-term. Researcher Lee Dongheon noted that despite U.S. tariffs, power-equipment margins widened sharply, and stabilization in the construction division supported record earnings. With North America’s backlog-to-sales ratio at high levels, profit momentum is expected to continue for years. Hyosung Heavy’s meteoric rise reflects mounting confidence in grid-equipment suppliers as AI data centers, renewable energy transitions and power-intensive industrial clusters reshape global electricity demand. 2025-11-06 17:57:06
  • Asian markets recover early Thursday from AI rout
    Asian markets recover early Thursday from AI rout SEOUL, November 06 (AJP) - Asian stocks rebounded Thursday as investors shrugged off a brief scare over stretched valuations in the AI boom. Seoul’s KOSPI gained 1.3 percent to 4,054.56 after a near 3-percent plunge the previous day, while the KOSDAQ edged up 0.25 percent to stay above 900. Retail investors led the recovery, while foreign and domestic institutions continued to take profits after weeks of heavy buying. Hyosung Heavy Industries rose 4.1 percent to 2.3 million won ($1,591). The stock has surged 462.6 percent year-to-date through Tuesday, far outpacing the KOSPI’s 71.8 percent rise over the same period. Analysts downplayed the fears of an AI bubble. "KOSPI has sufficient grounds to attract global investors over the long term," said Kim Dong-won, head of research at KB Securities. "We see the current rally as the beginning of the third bullish era in five decades of the Korean stock market," he added, reaffirming the brokerage's target of 5,000 points in 2026. In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 rose 1.3 percent to 50,850.12, rebounding from Wednesday’s 2.5 percent drop driven by U.S. tech volatility and concerns about an extended federal government shutdown. Japanese and Korean shares have been sensitive to sentiment around artificial intelligence, semiconductors, and power infrastructure, sectors that form the backbone of regional supply chains. SoftBank Group, involved in the U.S. AI infrastructure project “Stargate” with OpenAI, inched up 0.2 percent to 216.4 yen ($1.4), recovering from a double-digit decline the day before. China also posted modest gains. The Shanghai Composite added 0.3 percent to 3,982.56, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index rose 0.7 percent to 26,109.72. Newly listed autonomous-vehicle stocks underperformed in Hong Kong. WeRide dropped more than 12 percent and Pony.ai fell nearly 8 percent in their trading debut. Pony.ai, which is also listed in the United States, raised HK$6.7 billion ($862 million) through its IPO, according to regulatory filings. 2025-11-06 13:24:16
  • Koreas platform giant Naver reaps best quarterly revenue with AI help
    Korea's platform giant Naver reaps best quarterly revenue with AI help SEOUL, November 05 (AJP) - South Korea’s internet platform leader Naver Corp. posted its highest-ever quarterly revenue for the July–September period, powered by broad adoption of artificial intelligence across its businesses. According to the company’s regulatory filing Wednesday, operating profit rose 8.6 percent from a year earlier to 570.6 billion won ($394 million), while revenue jumped 15.6 percent to 3.138 trillion won ($2.17 billion). It is the first time in the company’s 26-year history that quarterly revenue has exceeded 3 trillion won. Naver said AI-driven ad optimization and its ADVoost Shopping tool sharply strengthened performance in commerce advertising. ADVoost Shopping automatically adjusts and improves ad results for Naver’s shopping products in real time using AI, a feature the company credited as central to the quarter’s growth. Commerce—anchored by Naver Shopping—led the earnings momentum. Sales increased 35.9 percent year-over-year to 985.5 billion won, up 14.4 percent from the previous quarter. Transaction volume at its Smart Store marketplace rose 12.3 percent on-year, supported by enhanced personalization in product discovery as well as expanded delivery and membership benefits. “Under our ‘On-Service AI’ strategy, we have focused on enhancing AI capabilities across all services and businesses, which translated into broader business opportunities and profit growth,” said Chief Executive Choi Soo-yeon in a conference call. “We will continue to extend AI integration into more areas, strengthen core competitiveness, and secure new growth engines for global expansion.” The broader market fell sharply, with the KOSPI down 2.9 percent on Wednesday, but Naver shares bucked the trend, closing 3.8 percent higher at 277,000 won. 2025-11-05 16:55:08
  • Bear returns to the Asian market  on AI bubble concerns
    Bear returns to the Asian market on AI bubble concerns SEOUL, November 05 (AJP) - Asian stocks slumped Wednesday as a wave of bearish sentiment swept through regional markets. South Korea’s benchmark KOSPI index plunged 4.1 percent to 3,950.96, falling back below the 4,000 mark just seven trading days after breaking it for the first time in history. The small-cap KOSDAQ tumbled even further, down 4.4 percent to 886.00. The downturn was led by heavyweight chipmakers. Samsung Electronics dropped 5.5 percent to 99,100 won ($68), while SK Hynix sank 7 percent to 545,000 won. Foreign investors sold a net 212.1 billion won worth of shares, while retail investors — who had bought more than 2 trillion won the previous session — continued to purchase stocks, adding 102 billion won, offering only limited support to the market. Analysts attributed the rout to overnight weakness on Wall Street, where concerns about stretched valuations in artificial intelligence stocks triggered a broad sell-off. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and Nasdaq all retreated on Tuesday, while AI beneficiary Palantir plunged 7.9 percent amid warnings it had become overvalued. Adding to the pressure, reports emerged that Michael Burry — the investor famed for profiting from the 2008 subprime mortgage collapse — had placed bets against Palantir and Nvidia, two of the most high-profile names in the AI rally. Lee Kyung-min, an analyst at Daishin Securities, said that while the long-term outlook for Korea’s leading growth stocks remains strong, short-term corrections are becoming increasingly likely. “The market may test lower levels around 3,700 on the KOSPI, corresponding to a forward price-to-earnings ratio of about 10.3 times,” he noted. Japan’s Nikkei 225 also declined, falling 2.4 percent to 50,238.38, tracking losses in Seoul. CNBC reported that the slump in Asian equities followed warnings from Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley urging investors to brace for a market pullback over the next two years. “It’s likely there’ll be a 10 to 20 percent drawdown in equity markets sometime in the next 12 to 24 months,” Goldman Sachs chief executive David Solomon said at the Global Financial Leaders’ Investment Summit in Hong Kong. “Such pullbacks happen even in positive market cycles — they don’t rewrite fundamental convictions about capital allocation.” Morgan Stanley CEO Ted Pick, speaking on the same panel, echoed the view. “We should welcome the possibility of 10 to 15 percent drawdowns that are not driven by a macro cliff effect,” he said, calling them “healthy developments rather than signs of crisis.” The Shanghai Composite Index fell 0.6 percent to 3,936.53, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index dropped 1.2 percent to 25,655.06. Taiwan’s TAIEX also declined 1.9 percent to 27,592.06. 2025-11-05 11:32:45
  • HOT STOCK: Samsung SDI shares jump on report of Tesla battery deal
    HOT STOCK: Samsung SDI shares jump on report of Tesla battery deal SEOUL, November 04 (AJP) - Shares of Samsung SDI climbed more than 4 percent in afternoon trading on Tuesday following a news report that the South Korean battery maker may supply more than 3 trillion won ($2.08 billion) worth of energy-storage system batteries to Tesla over the next three years. As of 2:20 p.m. in Seoul, Samsung SDI’s stock was up 4.1 percent at 340,500 won, extending gains after the report circulated in local media. The company, a unit of Samsung Group, develops rechargeable batteries for electric vehicles, energy-storage systems and IT devices, as well as electronic materials for semiconductors and displays. The report said Tesla’s demand for energy-storage systems, or ESS, has grown rapidly amid heavy investment in artificial intelligence data centers — prompting the U.S. electric vehicle maker to seek additional battery suppliers. If finalized, the deal could involve batteries produced at Samsung SDI’s factory under construction with Stellantis in Kokomo, Indiana, according to the report. When the Indiana project was announced in October 2023, CNBC reported that the two companies planned to invest about $3.2 billion in the facility. Industry analysts estimate that the potential Tesla supply agreement could reach an annual capacity of roughly 10 gigawatt-hours. Samsung SDI, however, denied that a deal had been concluded. “Reports suggesting that a deal between the two companies had been finalized are not true,” a company spokesperson said. “Negotiations are still underway, and the company has issued a regulatory filing to clarify the matter.” The market reaction also lifted sentiment toward Samsung SDI’s suppliers, including EcoPro BM, which produces cathode materials used in the company’s batteries. EcoPro BM reported an operating profit of 50.7 billion won ($36.6 million) for the third quarter, marking its third consecutive quarterly profit, driven by higher sales of energy-storage materials and investments in nickel refining projects in Indonesia. EcoPro BM, which also supplies SK On, said its 10 percent stake in an Indonesian nickel smelting project has helped stabilize raw material sourcing and improve profitability. The company expects further growth once its new plant in Debrecen, Hungary, begins operations. 2025-11-04 14:36:28
  • Asian markets mostly subdued amid mixed economic signs
    Asian markets mostly subdued amid mixed economic signs SEOUL, November 04 (AJP) - Asian markets were broadly muted on Tuesday as South Korea and Japan paused after nearly a week of uninterrupted gains, while Chinese equities traded flat amid conflicting economic signals. South Korea’s KOSPI slipped 0.7 percent to 4,192.20 in early trading as investors locked in profits following a sharp rally in large-cap semiconductor stocks. Foreign investors sold 701.2 billion won, while domestic institutions offloaded 207.9 billion won. Tech bellwethers weakened, with Samsung Electronics down 1.6 percent at 109,300 won ($76) and SK hynix falling 3.2 percent to 600,000 won. Hyundai Motor, Asia’s second-largest automaker, also declined 3.4 percent to 281,500 won. In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 edged down 0.2 percent to 52,305.91, as the index’s first move above the 52,000 threshold prompted profit-taking. A softer tone on Wall Street—despite gains in the Nasdaq and Philadelphia Semiconductor Index—also weighed on sentiment. China’s markets were largely unchanged. The Shanghai Composite Index inched up 0.01 percent to 3,977.10, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index added 0.02 percent to 26,162.96. Investors digested mixed macroeconomic signals: manufacturing activity in China weakened more than expected in October, clouding the demand outlook, while easing U.S.–China trade tensions—after Beijing suspended select export controls and Washington paused some tariffs following the recent high-level summit—provided a measure of support. 2025-11-04 11:26:24
  • Koreas HD Korea Shipbuilding posts milestone Q3 profit on brisk vessel sales
    Korea's HD Korea Shipbuilding posts milestone Q3 profit on brisk vessel sales SEOUL, November 03 (AJP) - HD Korea Shipbuilding & Offshore Engineering Co. on Monday reported its best-ever quarterly performance since adopting a holding-company structure, with operating profit more than doubling from a year earlier to surpass 1 trillion won ($733 million) for the first time. Operating profit jumped to 1.05 trillion won in the July–September period on revenue of 7.6 trillion won, up 21 percent on year. Net income surged nearly fourfold to 876.7 billion won, the company said in a regulatory filing. HD Hyundai Heavy Industries' stock rose 1.16 percent to close at 479,500 won. The flagship shipbuilder of HD Hyundai credited the robust results to a global shipbuilding boom and an increase in high-value vessel deliveries, which more than offset seasonal production slowdowns. Higher ship prices and productivity gains in the commercial vessel business also helped lift profitability, executives said during a conference call Monday. By segment, the shipbuilding division posted an operating profit of 865.8 billion won, up 129 percent from a year earlier, on revenue of 6.20 trillion won, a 16.5 percent increase. The engine and machinery business saw revenue rise 31 percent to 823.6 billion won amid growing demand for dual-fuel engines under tighter global emissions rules, with operating profit soaring 138 percent to 243.2 billion won. The offshore plant division recorded revenue of 280.4 billion won, buoyed by major project deliveries, but swung to a loss due to one-off expenses. HD Korea Shipbuilding serves as the intermediate holding company overseeing HD Hyundai Heavy Industries, HD Hyundai Mipo Dockyard, and HD Hyundai Samho Heavy Industries—together forming the country’s single largest shipbuilding group. 2025-11-03 17:49:02
  • Red-hot chip streak bolsters KOSPI as other Asian markets stay muted
    Red-hot chip streak bolsters KOSPI as other Asian markets stay muted SEOUL, November 03 (AJP) - South Korea’s benchmark KOSPI extended its record-setting rally on Monday, far outperforming other Asian markets as optimism from the APEC week—marked by Nvidia-linked momentum, eased U.S. tariffs, and expectations of China lifting its unofficial ban on Korean content—kept risk appetite high. The KOSPI rose 1.9 percent to 4,183.52 in early trading, while the KOSDAQ gained 1 percent to 909.09. SK hynix briefly touched 600,000 won ($419) on heavy institutional and retail buying, driven by broad conviction that the world’s leading HBM supplier will dominate the AI memory cycle. Nomura Securities projected the company could overtake Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) in operating profit by 2027, raising its target price by more than 55 percent from 540,000 won to 840,000 won. SK Securities went further, lifting its target to 1 million won. Investor sentiment strengthened after President Donald Trump and President Lee Jae Myung concluded a bilateral summit on October 29 that finalized the long-delayed U.S. import tariff framework. The agreement removed one of the biggest overhangs for the Korean economy and helped revive appetite for local equities. Morgan Stanley raised its 2025 growth forecast for South Korea to 1.6–1.7 percent from 1.5 percent, citing reduced risks tied to Korean institutional investments in the United States. The firm said Washington’s new investment cap would help contain capital outflows, while lower U.S. tariffs on auto parts would restore price competitiveness for Korean-made goods. The Federal Reserve’s rate cut at its October FOMC meeting—its first reduction this year—added external support. Lower U.S. borrowing costs are expected to ease global liquidity pressures and draw more capital into Asia’s biggest semiconductor hub. Entertainment stocks also rallied after JYP Entertainment founder and chief producer Park Jin-young met with Chinese President Xi Jinping, fueling speculation that Beijing may be preparing to lift its unofficial ban on Korean pop culture. JYP jumped 6.7 percent to 86,300 won, while SM Entertainment rose 3.4 percent, Cube Entertainment gained 3 percent, and HYBE advanced 0.9 percent. Market enthusiasm grew after reports that Xi offered positive remarks on Korean artists performing in China during a state banquet following Saturday’s Korea–China summit. Park, who serves as JYP’s chief creative officer, also co-chairs the Presidential Commission for Cultural Exchange. Elsewhere in Asia, China’s Shanghai Composite Index slipped 0.2 percent to 3,947.14, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index inched up 0.3 percent to 25,981.31. In Taipei, the TAIEX rose 0.6 percent to 28,399.55, though TSMC—Taiwan’s $1.5 trillion market-cap champion—fell 1.3 percent to $300.4. 2025-11-03 11:45:31
  • Asian Culture Calendar
    Asian Culture Calendar SEOUL, November 03 (AJP) - South Korea Nov. 6 - 8 Jeju Olle Walking Festival Sep. 26 - Nov. 8 Daegu International Opera Festival Japan Nov. 1 - 10 Gion Odori Nov. 1 - 3 Meiji Shrine Autumn Grand Festival Nov. 9 Arashiyama Momiji Festival Nov. 1 - 10 Sapporo Chrysanthemum Festival Nov. 1 -4 SAKANA & JAPAN Festival Thailand Nov. 5 - 6 Loy Krathong Festival Nov. 5 - 6 Yi Peng Lantern Festival Nov. 21 - 23 Surin Elephant Round-up Nov. 28 - 29 Pattaya International Fireworks Festival Taiwan Nov. 3 Penghu Cross-Sea Marathon Hong Kong Nov. 6 - 12 India by the Bay Nov. 6 - 9 Freespace Jazz Fest 2025-11-03 09:21:21
  • HOT STOCK: Hyundai Motor stocks fly on Trump and Jensen Huang effect
    HOT STOCK: Hyundai Motor stocks fly on Trump and Jensen Huang effect SEOUL, October 31 (AJP) - Listed units of Hyundai Motor Group rode the APEC wave on Friday, lifted by eased tariffs during U.S. President Donald Trump’s visit and the halo of Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, whose appearance dominated the APEC scene after Trump’s departure. Hyundai Motor closed up 9.4 percent at 290,000 won ($203). Hyundai Glovis rose 10.4 percent, and Hyundai AutoEver surged 26 percent to finish at 203,500 won. The rally was fueled by the long-awaited settlement of a trade deal under which Washington agreed to cut tariffs on Korean car exports from 25 percent to 15 percent, aligning Korea with Japanese and European rivals. Tariff negotiations over the past year had weighed heavily on the corporate outlook, particularly for Hyundai Glovis, complicating its logistics operations. The resolution removes a major point of uncertainty for the auto and shipping sectors, said Hyung-Kyu Kang, emeritus professor of transportation and logistics at Hanyang University. The tech leaders’ night out added to the momentum behind Hyundai Motor shares. The talk of the town was the chicken-and-beer gathering at Kkanbu Chicken in southern Seoul, where Samsung Electronics Chairman Lee Jae-yong, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and Hyundai Motor Group Chairman Chung Eui-sun shared drinks and casual conversation. Images of the trio mingling with patrons in everyday attire went viral, briefly boosting sales at Kkanbu Chicken outlets, with some stores reporting nearly double their usual weekend orders. “Kkanbu,” meaning trusted friend, became globally familiar after its appearance in the Netflix hit Squid Game. In Korean schoolyard slang, a kkanbu is a true equal — someone who has your back. The three industry leaders’ toast beneath the restaurant’s symbolic sign came at a moment of rising influence for all three companies: Nvidia’s ascent as the world’s most valuable firm, Samsung Electronics’ record-breaking rally securing its place as Korea’s top market-cap company, and Hyundai Motor’s climb to No. 5. 2025-10-31 17:43:18