Journalist

Ryu Yuna, Lee Jung-woo, Kim Hee-su, and Joonha Yoo
  • Korean memory makers eye bumper year to extend into 2026
    Korean memory makers eye bumper year to extend into 2026 SEOUL, December 09 (AJP) - Samsung Electronics Co. and SK hynix Inc., enjoying their best-yet bumper cycle, are set to reap more than $20 billion in combined operating income for the quarter ending December, according to upgrades by brokerage houses following stronger-than-expected price gains in memory chips from mass-market to high end. Kiwoom Securities on Monday projected SK hynix’s fourth-quarter operating profit at 16.2 trillion won ($11 billion), about 1.6 trillion won above the market consensus estimate of 14.6 trillion won. Its mainstay DRAM business, led by high-bandwidth memory (HBM), is expected to deliver 15.3 trillion won, while NAND flash profit is seen at 900 billion won—up 39 percent and 170 percent, respectively, from the previous quarter. KB Securities projected on Tuesday that Samsung Electronics will record an operating profit of 19 trillion won in the fourth quarter, a 192 percent jump from a year earlier, comfortably beating the market consensus of 14.9 trillion won. Operating profit from the chip division is expected to surge fivefold year on year and double from the previous quarter to 15.1 trillion won, with DRAM operating margins improving to 53 percent from 32 percent in the same period last year. Industry watchers predict the red-hot earnings streak to extend into 2026, citing severe supply constraints across memory products including mainstream DRAM. As major cloud service providers rush to secure memory components for AI data centers, prices of HBM, DRAM, and NAND all continue to push north. Financial data provider FnGuide estimates Samsung Electronics’ 2026 operating profit will exceed 80 trillion won ($54.3 billion), while SK hynix’s is forecast at 73.24 trillion won ($49.7 billion). The projections suggest the two Korean companies are heading into one of the most profitable stretches in global semiconductor history. “Samsung has reportedly raised contract prices for server DRAM by 60 percent to 80 percent in the fourth quarter,” said Kim Dong-won, head of research at KB Securities. “Despite these steep hikes, many customers other than big tech companies haven’t been able to secure sufficient supply since November, suggesting prices will continue to climb aggressively.” The surge in chip demand is likely to intensify as Google’s latest AI model, Gemini 3.0, equipped with Tensor Processing Units (TPUs), enters direct competition with Nvidia’s GPUs. Analysts say the rise of such new architectures signals an expansion of the semiconductor market and sustained demand for high-performance memory chips. 2025-12-09 16:54:02
  • For South Korean stars, fame comes with a lasting moral burden
    For South Korean stars, fame comes with a lasting moral burden SEOUL, December 08 (AJP) - Comedian Park Na-rae has become the latest South Korean celebrity to disappear from public view after failing to withstand the country’s notoriously unforgiving ethical expectations for public figures. After a monthlong barrage of online criticism and allegations of workplace mistreatment from former managers, Park announced Monday she would “step away” from entertainment until the controversy is fully resolved. Her departure leaves a slate of major shows abruptly vacant — including MBC’s “I Live Alone” and “Where Is My Home,” tvN’s “Amazing Saturday,” and JTBC’s YouTube series “Narae-sik.” MBC also canceled production of its upcoming variety program “I’m Excited Too,” which had planned to feature Park as a lead. The scandal escalated after entertainment outlet Dispatch reported Thursday that Park’s former managers filed a provisional seizure application against her property at the Seoul Western District Court and are preparing a damages suit, citing alleged workplace bullying, verbal abuse, “special assault,” and improper requests such as picking up medical prescriptions. Park’s fall comes amid a widening wave of celebrity reckonings. Just days earlier, actor Cho Jin-woong admitted he spent time in a juvenile detention center for crimes committed as a teenager — a revelation that immediately put the airing of tvN’s highly anticipated “Signal 2” in doubt despite the series already being completed. Comedian Cho Se-ho is also under intense scrutiny after online posts linked him to an organization behind illegal online gambling operations. A Fame Economy Built on Morality The swift collapses reflect something deeply embedded in South Korean popular culture: celebrities are expected to embody a standard of moral cleanliness that far exceeds that of ordinary citizens. A 2024 Korea Research survey found: 71 percent of Koreans consider entertainers to be public figures, second only to politicians (90%). Nearly 9 in 10 expect celebrities to demonstrate modesty and good manners, 88 percent believe the public has a right to know about alleged drug use or involvement in illegal sex trade, 82 percent say infidelity or bullying should be exposed, and more than 75 percent say even “minor offenses” such as public drunkenness justify public disclosure. This moral rigor is part of what Professor Shim Seok-tae, chair of the Korean Society for Media Law and professor at Semyung Graduate School of Journalism, calls “a society that consumes morality.” “Entertainers make a living off people’s curiosity. Popularity isn’t a right — it’s something they earn and must maintain,” Shim said. “The more they attract attention, the more people feel entitled to know about them. It’s a form of voluntary exposure.” He notes that modern entertainment — reality TV, vlogs, Instagram — thrives on curated intimacy. Home tours, daily routines, and personal confessions become commodities, blurring the boundary between private and public selves. “It’s hard to say public interest in their private lives is always wrong,” Shim added. “The problem is excess — when coverage becomes invasive rather than relevant to their public image or work.” The Higher the Fame, the Heavier the Fall The moral demand is not merely theoretical. It has produced devastating consequences. Actor Lee Sun-kyun, celebrated globally for his role in Parasite, took his own life in 2023 amid a ferocious media storm over drug allegations — a sharp rupture from the “gentle, earnest” persona he embodied in “My Mister.” Cho Jin-woong’s case carries cultural weight of its own. “Cho wasn’t an ordinary actor — he is associated with works tied to Korea’s independence fighters,” Shim noted, implying that the moral expectations rise further when a star’s repertoire intertwines with national narrative. South Koreans also do not easily forgive or forget: Actress Kim Min-hee has not appeared in commercial films or advertisements since her affair with director Hong Sang-soo became public in 2016. Actor Yoo Ah-in has been unable to work domestically for nearly three years due to ongoing drug-related investigations. In each case, an individual controversy transformed into a career-halting judgment rendered by the broader public. Cultural Identity, Trust, and K-pop’s Global Legacy At its core, Korea’s moral scrutiny reflects deeper questions about representation, aspiration, and trust. Celebrities here are not treated merely as entertainers; they are brand ambassadors, moral symbols, and often extensions of a collective national identity. This perception has long underpinned K-pop’s universal appeal — discipline, civility, decency, and emotional intelligence — values that are marketed globally as quintessentially Korean. But the double-edged sword is evident. “Our society’s double standards are part of the problem,” Shim said. “We consume scandal like entertainment, yet insist the entertainers themselves remain spotless. The same attention that creates stars can also kill them.” In an economy of fame where intimacy is currency and morality is a performance, the price of being famous in South Korea remains extraordinarily high — and increasingly, unsustainable. 2025-12-08 17:59:32
  • KOSPI closes higher on LGES battery deal while Chinese and Japanese markets stay flat
    KOSPI closes higher on LGES battery deal while Chinese and Japanese markets stay flat SEOUL, December 8 (AJP) - The South Korean stock market saw gains on Monday, while other major Asian markets including Japan and China, remained flat. South Korea's benchmark KOSPI rose 1.3 percent to close at 4,154.85, while the junior KOSDAQ edged up 0.3 percent to finish at 927.79. Memory chip giant Samsung Electronics gained 0.9 percent, closing at 109,400 won (US$75), and rival SK hynix rose 5.2 percent to 573,000 won. LG Energy Solution, the third-largest company in terms of market capitalization, climbed 5.6 percent to 450,000 won, apparently buoyed by its announcement of signing a major supply deal with German automaker Mercedes-Benz AG worth 2.06 trillion won ($1.4 billion). The deal, which covers markets including North America and Europe, will run from March 2028 to June 2035. Despite the overall rise of KOSPI, stocks of major talent mills all declined, with HYBE falling 0.3 percent to 289,000 won, JYP Entertainment 1.2 percent to 67,600 won, SM Entertainment 2.3 percent to 102,000 won, and YG Entertainment 1 percent to 61,500 won. Notably, eco-friendly battery maker EcoPro's stock hit a new 52-week high during mid-trading, which many speculated was driven by the anticipated move of the tech-heavy KOSDAQ's top-ranked Alteogen to the KOSPI. This sparked investor interest in the No. 2 and No. 3 stocks — EcoPro BM and EcoPro — as they were expected to become the next leading stocks. EcoPro BM surged 8.5 percent to 173,300 won, while its holding company, EcoPro, jumped 21.3 percent to 117,500 won. Meanwhile, in Japan, the Nikkei 225 rose 0.2 percent to 50,581.94. Among major Japanese firms, Toyota rose 0.9 percent to 3,060 yen ($20), and Hitachi gained 0.6 percent to 4,911 yen. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Japan's second-largest company by market value, fell 1.2 percent to 2,498.5 yen. SoftBank dropped 3.3 percent to 18,655 yen, and Sony edged down 0.7 percent to 4,300 yen. Looking at other major market players, Nintendo fell 1.4 percent to 12,320 yen, Honda rose 0.6 percent to 1,528.5 yen, and Canon gained 1.0 percent, ending at 4,576 yen. In China, the Shanhai Composite Index gained 0.5 percent to 3,924.08. 2025-12-08 17:58:33
  • Koreas LGES lands $1.4 bn EV battery deal with Mercedes-Benz
    Korea's LGES lands $1.4 bn EV battery deal with Mercedes-Benz SEOUL, December 08 (AJP) - South Korea's top battery maker LG Energy Solution (LGES) has signed a 2.06 trillion won ($1.4 billion) electric-vehicle battery supply contract with Mercedes-Benz AG, extending the company’s streak of securing multi-billion-dollar global deals this year as automakers race to lock in long-term cell capacity. According to LGES’ regulatory filing on Monday, the contract covers battery supply to Mercedes-Benz from March 2028 through June 2035, spanning both Europe and North America, the two fastest-growing EV markets. The deal amounts to roughly 8 percent of LGES’ latest annual revenue of 25.62 trillion won, based on its 2024 consolidated financial statements. At 10:10 a.m. shares of LGES jumped 4.5 percent to 445,000 won($303), far outperforming KOSPI gain of 0.2 percent. LGES said the contract value, translated at the exchange rate of 1,471.5 won per dollar on Dec. 5, may be adjusted as details, including total volume and duration, remain subject to further negotiation with the German automaker. The agreement contains no upfront deposits or advance payments, the filing added. The Mercedes-Benz deal adds to a series of multibillion-dollar contracts LG Energy Solution has secured in 2025, underscoring its strengthened global positioning as the EV market bifurcates between premium automakers and cost-driven Chinese competitors. LGED maintains third rank in global EV battery market, following Chinese behemoths CATL and BYD. Its share however dropped to 9.3 percent as of October this year from 11.1 percent in the same period a year ago, according to Korean market research firm SNE Research. Major LGES contracts announced so far this year include $4.3 billion battery supply deal with an undisclosed party in the United States in July, presumed to be Tesla, aside from exclusive U.S supply contracts with Hyundai Motor Group, Honda Motor, and General Motors. 2025-12-08 10:23:41
  • Quiet flight from Coupang after data breach deepens pain for small vendors
    Quiet flight from Coupang after data breach deepens pain for small vendors SEOUL, December 05 (AJP) - Fallout from Coupang’s massive data breach is widening beyond consumers to tens of thousands of small vendors across South Korea who rely on the e-commerce giant as a primary sales channel and livelihood. The National Assembly Science and ICT Committee has scheduled another hearing on Dec. 17 to examine a growing number of complaints against Coupang, including difficulties in canceling subscriptions or discontinuing platform use. Lawmakers say the scale and sensitivity of the data leak — which affected nearly all of Coupang’s 34 million users — warrant continued scrutiny. Market researcher IGAWorks showed that Coupang’s daily active users, which had hovered around 18 million before the breach, slipped to 17.8 million but have so far remained above the 17 million mark. Instead of a mass exodus, industry data suggest a “silent boycott”: customers reducing their use of Coupang for daily shopping or avoiding Coupang Eats for food delivery due to loss of trust. That shift has delivered a sharp blow to vendors and dining partners. A café owner in Gwangju said delivery orders via Coupang Eats “dropped to zero,” with daily sales falling more than 20 percent from a week earlier. A seafood company selling primarily through Coupang reported a more than 30 percent slide in revenue. According to Coupang’s internal “Impact Report 2025,” released in September, the company serviced around 230,000 small businesses as of 2023 — roughly 75 percent of all its vendors — generating a combined 12 trillion won ($8.2 billion) in annual transactions. The data leak now exposes them to a double shock: plunging sales and anxiety over potential compromise of business information. “I’m massively anxious. I changed all my business account passwords, but it feels like they’ve already been stolen,” said the owner of a Korean beef stew shop in downtown Seoul. “Coupang Eats accounts for a large proportion of my orders, so even if I want to quit, I can’t. It used to be about 50–50 between Baemin and Coupang Eats, but now it’s closer to 45–55 because more customers use Coupang Eats.” Holding up a text alert from the platform, she added, “Coupang said a delivery address was leaked. I panicked. I deleted my personal account, but I can’t delete my business account — how else can I run my shop?” A Coupang executive, speaking anonymously to AJP, said vendor information is stored in a separate system that “shows no abnormal signs,” and stressed that partner data remains protected. Other shop owners said Coupang Eats’ appeal makes it difficult to exit despite safety concerns. “Customers prefer Coupang. Baemin assigns riders through its system, which takes more time. Coupang uses individual drivers, so deliveries are faster,” said one operator. Coupang Eats has expanded rapidly this year, leveraging its ultra-fast delivery model and free deliveries for Coupang subscribers. It held a 37.6 percent market share in the food-delivery sector, trailing No. 1 Baemin’s 56.7 percent. “We live in a paradox,” said Lee Joong-seon, secretary-general of the National Franchise Owners Association. “Even when sales are high, small business owners make little profit because of the massive commission fees charged by platforms like Coupang and Baemin. When sales are low, life gets harder. Either way, we lose. And now, after the Coupang data leak, it feels like insult upon injury.” The Korean Federation of Micro Enterprises said it plans to collect vendor complaints and prepare for collective legal action if needed, according to member Ryu Pil-seon. Meanwhile, consumer frustrations continue to mount. On Coupang’s PC version, account deletion requires a six-step process, including personal-information verification and a mandatory survey — a design critics say reflects the broader difficulty of disengaging from the platform even amid a crisis of confidence. 2025-12-05 16:58:48
  • Asian stocks mostly down early Friday ahead of FOMC week
    Asian stocks mostly down early Friday ahead of FOMC week SEOUL, December 05 (AJP) - Asian stocks were mostly lower in early Friday trading as investors stayed on the sidelines ahead of next week’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting, which is expected to set the tone for U.S. rate policy in 2025. In Seoul, the benchmark KOSPI rose 0.5 percent to 4,047.41, while the KOSDAQ slipped 0.7 percent to 923.70 as of 10:05 a.m. Samsung Electronics gained 1.9 percent to 107,050 won ($72.8), whereas SK hynix fell 0.7 percent to 538,000 won. Large-caps were broadly higher. LG Energy Solution, the market’s third-largest stock, advanced 3.1 percent to 422,500 won, and Hyundai Motor jumped 6.4 percent to 301,750 won. Hyundai Motor surpassed its previous intraday record of 299,000 won set on January 11, 2021, extending a four-day rally after Washington confirmed a retroactive reduction in tariffs on Korean auto imports to 15 percent. Samsung Biologics, the fourth-largest by market value, declined 1.4 percent to 1,656,000 won. Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 1.4 percent to 50,329.03. Among the country’s three largest firms by market capitalization, Toyota Motor declined 2.3 percent to 3,033 yen ($19.6); Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group dropped 0.9 percent to 2,492 yen; and Sony Group slid 2 percent to 4,328 yen. As of 10:40 a.m., 39 of the top 40 large-cap stocks were down, with SoftBank Group the sole gainer, rising 1.7 percent to 18,510 yen. In China, the Shanghai Composite Index slipped 0.2 percent to 3,867.04, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index fell 0.6 percent to 25,787.66. 2025-12-05 11:47:07
  • Asian market mostly flat early Thursday, KOSDAQ stands out
    Asian market mostly flat early Thursday, KOSDAQ stands out SEOUL, December 04 (AJP) - Asian equities were mostly flat in early Thursday trading as investors stayed on the sidelines ahead of next week’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting in the United States. In Seoul, the benchmark KOSPI slipped 0.5 percent to 4,017.89, while the tech-heavy KOSDAQ surged 9.2 percent to 934.21 as of 9:01 a.m. The secondary market’s total capitalization topped the 500-trillion-won level for the first time, buoyed by reports that the government is preparing a stimulus package aimed at smaller-cap and growth stocks. Selling by both foreign and institutional investors weighed on the main board. Foreign investors unloaded 259 billion won ($176 million) worth of shares, and institutions sold a net 107.6 billion won. Retail investors stepped in as net buyers of 362.8 billion won. Samsung Electronics slipped 0.8 percent to 103,700 won and SK hynix fell 2.5 percent to 538,500 won. Large-cap names showed mixed performance: LG Energy Solution eased 0.1 percent to 417,500 won, KB Financial declined 1 percent to 130,400 won and HD Hyundai Heavy Industries lost 0.9 percent to 529,000 won. Hyundai Motor gained 3.8 percent to 276,500 won, Doosan Enerbility rose 1.8 percent to 79,800 won and Kia added 0.3 percent to 119,000 won. Entertainment shares were weaker across the sector. HYBE slipped 0.8 percent to 293,500 won, JYP Entertainment dipped 0.2 percent to 68,500 won, SM Entertainment fell 0.4 percent to 104,000 won and YG Entertainment eased 0.2 percent to 62,800 won. U.S. stocks closed higher Wednesday as fresh data pointed to cooling labor-market conditions. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.9 percent to 47,882.90, the S&P 500 gained 0.3 percent to 6,849.72 and the Nasdaq Composite added 0.2 percent to 23,454.09. Private-sector employment fell by 32,000 in November, according to ADP, sharply missing expectations for a 10,000 increase. Sentiment was dented somewhat by reports that Microsoft trimmed its revenue outlook for artificial-intelligence-related businesses. “Signs of weaker employment and easing inflation are reinforcing expectations for a Federal Reserve rate cut,” said Lee Sung-hoon, an analyst at Kiwoom Securities. He noted that growth shares, particularly in biosciences, typically benefit from lower interest rates, although the Korean market failed to reflect that trend at the open. Japan’s Nikkei 225 climbed 0.5 percent to 50,105.72. Toyota Motor rose 0.2 percent to 3,012 yen ($19.4), Honda Motor gained 0.9 percent to 1,516 yen and Nissan Motor added 0.5 percent to 364 yen, sending the country’s automakers modestly higher. SoftBank Group advanced 3 percent to 17,175 yen, Sony Group rose 0.4 percent to 4,407 yen and Nintendo gained 0.9 percent to 12,765 yen. In China, the Shanghai Composite Index edged up 0.1 percent to 3,881.55, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index fell 0.1 percent to 25,728.64. 2025-12-04 11:40:56
  • Korea must devise fundamental youth joblessness approach as AI worsens job market
    Korea must devise fundamental youth joblessness approach as AI worsens job market SEOUL, December 03 (AJP) - South Korea must map out a comprehensive youth career program and introduce structural flexibility in working conditions to address the deepening mismatch in its labor market, with AI poised to further worsen job prospects for highly educated young adults – nearly half of whom already unemployed, scholars at home and abroad warn. The share of university graduates among the unemployed reached 49.6 percent in September, up from 47.8 percent in 2024 and 37.7 percent in 2010, according to the Ministry of Data and Statistics. The jobless rate among college or higher-degree holders has continued to climb despite a shrinking youth population and stable headline employment. Last month, there were only 0.42 job openings per job seeker—the lowest October figure since the 1998 Asian financial crisis. Registrations on the government’s Work24 platform fell 6.6 percent from a year earlier, while new job postings declined 19.2 percent. Total employment in October increased slightly to 29 million, but the number of employed 15- to 29-year-olds plunged by 163,000, marking the 36th consecutive monthly fall. It now takes an average of 11.5 months for a young Korean to secure a first job—the longest delay on record. AJP spoke with labor and welfare scholars in Korea, the United States, and the United Kingdom to examine the causes behind the trend. Structural Mismatch in Economic Stagnation Professor Lee Byoung-hoon of Chung-Ang University points to a structural imbalance between educational attainment and labor demand, a pattern increasingly seen across advanced economies. “Most of today’s youth joblessness involves highly educated graduates,” he said. “Their numbers have surged, but labor market demand has not. Economic growth has become employment-poor; capital now flows into technology and automation rather than labor.” Lee recommends that Korea benchmark the European Union’s “Youth Guarantee,” which treats unemployment not as a simple shortage of vacancies but as a breakdown in the school-to-work transition—a passage now prolonged and painful for many young adults. “Policies that focus only on creating jobs, like temporary internships or short-term schemes, have limited impact,” he said. “The Youth Guarantee approach recognizes that this is a structural transition issue. Governments must support young people’s entire journey—housing, debt relief, mental health, and career counselling—so they can cross the bridge from education to work.” Labor Market Rigidity and Risk Aversion Kim Jin-young, economics professor at Korea University, blames Korea’s rigid, union-leaning labor laws for discouraging companies from hiring inexperienced workers. “Because dismissing staff is difficult, firms become extremely cautious when recruiting,” he said. “They prefer experienced employees because it’s hard to gauge the ability of newcomers,” making market entry especially harsh for young job seekers. Kim argues that greater flexibility—allowing easier movement for both employers and workers—would shorten the long and often hesitant job-matching process. “Workers should be able to move between roles until they find the right fit,” he said. “Right now, both sides feel locked in, leading to long, cautious job searches.” International Pressures and AI Disruption Nobel laureate David Card of UC Berkeley cited four global forces undermining Korea’s youth employment: “1) disruption caused by US tariffs and trade policy. 2) AI. AI is heavily disrupting some sectors that use a lot of entry level software development engineers. 3) Competition from China. 4) Supply imbalances… supply outpaced the growth in demand for these workers.” A recent Bank of Korea report found that nearly all 211,000 youth job losses over the past three years occurred in industries most exposed to AI. Graduates with bachelor’s and master’s degrees face the highest automation risk, while doctorate holders and vocational-track workers have been less affected. Beyond Welfare: Building “Good Jobs” For Yoon Hong-sik, professor of social welfare at Inha University, the crisis reveals a deeper flaw in Korea’s welfare and industrial model. “We once believed AI would only replace low- or mid-skill work, but it’s now hollowing out high-skilled roles too,” he said. “University education must shift from functional training to cultivating creativity and critical thinking—skills machines cannot replicate.” Yoon argues that welfare states should not only compensate the jobless but actively foster quality employment. “In Nordic countries, 25–30 percent of all workers are employed in the public sector, providing universal social services. Korea’s share is barely 8 percent,” he said. “We need two pillars: robust public-sector jobs that deliver care, housing, and education, and a vibrant private sector that builds on this human capital to create advanced service industries.” Rethinking What Education Means Marcus Alexander, professor at London Business School, says the takeaway for students is increasingly clear. “Learning ‘facts’ is irrelevant; learning how to think effectively is more important than ever,” he said. “The critical issue is not about getting a degree but about what graduates actually learn from very different courses and institutions.” 2025-12-03 15:49:35
  • KOSPI bounces above 4,000 in broad mixed Asia markets
    KOSPI bounces above 4,000 in broad mixed Asia markets SEOUL, December 03 (AJP) - South Korea’s benchmark KOSPI climbed back above the 4,000 level on Wednesday, supported by overnight gains on Wall Street. In Seoul, the KOSPI rose 1.1 percent to 4,039.21 as of 10:08 a.m., recovering the 4,000 mark for the first time in nine sessions. The tech-heavy KOSDAQ added 0.3 percent to 930.74. Among blue chips, Samsung Electronics advanced 1.9 percent to 105,350 won ($71), while SK hynix slipped 0.3 percent to 556,500 won. Except for SK hynix, all of the top 10 stocks by market capitalization traded higher. Samsung C&T jumped 10 percent to 247,000 won, the biggest gainer among the top 50 firms. The rally followed news that Hong Ra-hee, widow of the late Samsung Group Chairman Lee Kun-hee, will donate her entire 1.06 percent stake in Samsung C&T to her son, Samsung Electronics Chairman Lee Jae-yong. After the share transfer, Lee’s stake in Samsung C&T will rise from 19.93 percent to 20.99 percent, while Hong’s holdings will drop to zero. Hong had inherited the stake in 2021 after her husband’s death, with the shares valued at roughly 400 billion won ($272 million). Entertainment stocks were mixed: HYBE gained 0.2 percent to 298,500 won, YG Entertainment added 0.2 percent to 62,900 won, while JYP Entertainment edged down 0.2 percent to 68,500 won and SM Entertainment lost 1.1 percent to 105,700 won. Overnight, U.S. stocks advanced as buying in tech shares lifted all three major indexes. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index gained 1.8 percent as Nvidia rose 0.9 percent. In Japan, the Nikkei 225 rose 0.7 percent to 49,664.16, though Toyota Motor shares fell 1.3 percent to 3,007 yen ($19). Honda declined 0.4 percent to 1,508 yen, Sony dropped 0.8 percent to 4,406 yen and Nintendo slid 1.2 percent to 12,705 yen. SoftBank gained 2.9 percent to 16,125 yen. China’s Shanghai Composite slipped 0.2 percent to 3,889.45, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index fell 0.8 percent to 25,889.32. 2025-12-03 11:44:09
  • Aju Media Group and Vision Culture sign partnership for WAIFF Seoul 2026
    Aju Media Group and Vision Culture sign partnership for WAIFF Seoul 2026 SEOUL, December 02 (AJP) - Aju Media Group and Vision Culture signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on Tuesday to form a strategic partnership for the successful hosting of the “World AI Film Festival (WAIFF) Seoul 2026.” The signing ceremony was held at Aju Media Group’s headquarters in Jongno-gu, central Seoul. The event was attended by Aju Media Group Chairman Kwak Young-gil, President Lim Kwu-jin, Vision Culture Chairman Byun Jun-yeon, and WAIFF Seoul Chair Lee Catalina. Under the agreement, Aju Media Group will serve as the official media partner for “WAIFF Seoul 2026,” which is scheduled to take place in March next year. The two sides will cooperate across several areas, including production and coverage of WAIFF Seoul-related content, media support for the opening and awards ceremonies, promotion and reporting through domestic and international media channels, joint planning of programs, interviews, and on-site documentation. WAIFF is an international, network-based film festival that explores the artistic fusion of film and artificial intelligence. It was established by Institut EuropIA in Nice, France, and has expanded into a global event hosted in France, Brazil, Japan, China, and South Korea. The first edition of WAIFF took place in April this year in Nice, near Cannes. It received more than 1,500 film submissions from 85 countries, drawing around 200 festival officials and over 1,000 attendees. 2025-12-02 17:10:50