Journalist
Kim Dong-young, Lim Jaeho
davekim0807@ajupress.com
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South Korea joins OpenAI's trusted cyber access program SEOUL, May 27 (AJP) - South Korea has become one of the first two countries in Asia, together with Japan, to join OpenAI's Trusted Access for Cyber program, securing government-level access to the U.S. firm's most advanced artificial intelligence models for cybersecurity research and defense. The Ministry of Science and ICT announced Wednesday that Vice Minister Ryu Je-myung met OpenAI Chief Strategy Officer Jason Kwon in Seoul on Tuesday to formalize Seoul's participation in the program, which grants vetted governments and institutions-controlled access to OpenAI's frontier models for defensive cyber work. The Korea Internet & Security Agency will serve as the implementing body, the ministry said, adding that the two sides agreed to continue talks on broader applications of AI in cybersecurity. The arrangement is expected to give Seoul a window into how rapidly advancing AI systems could be weaponized, and how to blunt that threat. "Through this cooperation with OpenAI, Korea has laid the groundwork to get ahead of AI-driven cyber threats," Ryu said, pledging to deepen engagement with global AI companies to sharpen the country's defensive capabilities. The two sides also discussed building a working framework between Seoul's AI Safety Institute and OpenAI for joint safety evaluations and research on increasingly capable models. OpenAI said it would actively review the proposal. Separately, the Korean government is exploring participation in Project Glasswing, a rival coalition led by Anthropic that pairs its unreleased Claude Mythos Preview model with about a dozen launch partners — including Amazon, Apple, Google, Microsoft and Nvidia — and some 40 additional organizations to hunt down software vulnerabilities. No Korean entity has yet joined the initiative. 2026-05-27 10:43:49 -
Anthropic opens Seoul office, names veteran tech executive to lead Korea push SEOUL, May 27 (AJP) - Anthropic, the U.S. artificial intelligence company behind the Claude chatbot, is to officially open a Seoul office and named industry veteran Choi Ki-young as its first country manager for South Korea, deepening its push into one of Asia's most lucrative AI markets. Senior Anthropic executives are scheduled to visit Seoul in the coming weeks to formally inaugurate the office and meet with major enterprise clients, the company said Wednesday. Choi joins from Snowflake, where he served as Korea country manager, and brings more than three decades of experience steering global technology firms in the Asia-Pacific region. He previously led Korean operations for Google Cloud, Adobe, Autodesk and Microsoft. "Korea ranks among the world's most mature AI markets in terms of hardware innovation, developer talent and corporate adoption," Choi said. "Domestic companies combine strong technical capabilities with a genuine commitment to responsible AI, and we are building our Korea business for the long term." The Seoul team is to pursue tailored go-to-market strategies and forge partnerships across enterprises, developers and research institutions. According to Anthropic's Economic Index report published in March, Claude usage in South Korea runs at about 3.5 times the level expected for its population size, with particularly strong adoption in technology and creative sectors. Domestic users already include legal tech startup Law&Company, which has built a Claude-powered legal assistant, and SK Telecom, which has deployed the model in customer service operations. Anthropic enters a Korean market where global rivals have moved quickly. OpenAI launched its Korean subsidiary in May 2025 and formally opened a Seoul office last September, naming former Google Korea chief Kim Kyoung-hoon as country manager — its third Asian base after Tokyo and Singapore. Google has been pushing its Gemini models in Korea through existing Google Cloud and Android channels, including a high-profile partnership with Samsung Electronics that has embedded Gemini in flagship Galaxy devices and the Ballie home robot. The rush reflects South Korea's strategic weight in the global AI value chain. The country dominates high-bandwidth memory chip production through Samsung Electronics and SK hynix — critical inputs for AI training infrastructure — and houses some of the world's heaviest enterprise AI adopters in semiconductors, automotive, shipbuilding and consumer electronics, giving foreign model developers both a supply base and a high-value customer pool to court. 2026-05-27 09:46:32 -
Korea holds off on IEA oil release, eyeing August crunch SEOUL, May 26 (AJP) - South Korea is holding back on releasing its share of the International Energy Agency's record emergency oil stockpile, opting to preserve the buffer for a potentially graver supply crunch in August as the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively shut. With the June 9 deadline for Seoul's pledged contribution just two weeks away, Yang Ki-wook, director general for industrial resources security at the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources, told reporters Tuesday at the Sejong government complex that the country sees little immediate need to tap its reserves. The IEA in March coordinated the largest emergency stock release in its 52-year history, with its 32 member states agreeing to put 400 million barrels on the market to blunt the supply shock from the U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict. South Korea's quota stands at 22.46 million barrels, or about 5.6 percent of the total. Officials are betting that the worst is yet to come. Although recent diplomatic overtures between Washington and Tehran have stirred cautious hopes of a ceasefire, a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz could leave Korean refiners scrambling for crude from August onward, when domestic stockpiles are projected to thin sharply. IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol warned that global oil markets could slip into a "red zone" in July or August as inventories drain and summer travel demand swells, with Middle Eastern barrels still largely absent from the market. "Government stockpiles are a tool for the worst-case scenario, so we believe a release should be considered cautiously, keeping the card in hand for what may come," Yang said, adding that domestic refiners have responded positively to the existing swap arrangement, under which the government lends out reserves against verified overseas purchases. Seoul is also reshaping its supply map. Non-Middle Eastern crude is projected to account for 51.5 percent of imports from May through July, up sharply from 30.9 percent a year earlier — a shift Yang called unprecedented and a strategic imperative for the country's resource security. 2026-05-26 16:53:23 -
Asia's energy shock far from over despite Hormuz reopening talks SEOUL, May 26 (AJP) - South Korea and other Asian economies heavily dependent on Gulf energy supplies are bracing for prolonged disruptions even as diplomatic momentum builds toward a potential reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, with analysts warning that supply chains, refining operations and shipping flows could take months to normalize. Iran is expected to allow commercial shipping through the strait about 30 days after a peace agreement with Washington is finalized, Nikkei reported Monday, citing a source familiar with the negotiations. U.S. President Donald Trump said over the weekend that a deal had been "largely negotiated," while Iran's foreign ministry described the arrangement as a memorandum of understanding ahead of broader talks expected within 30 to 60 days. But the situation remains fragile. The diplomatic push intensified after U.S. forces struck missile sites and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps vessels in southern Iran on Monday in what Washington described as defensive operations, underscoring the volatility surrounding the conditional ceasefire in place since early April. The Strait of Hormuz has effectively remained closed since March 2. IMF PortWatch data showed only two commercial vessels transited the chokepoint on May 17, compared with a pre-crisis average of roughly 95 ships per day. Brent crude rose 2.43 percent Monday to around $116.73 per barrel, more than 60 percent above prewar levels. For South Korea, where roughly 99 percent of Middle Eastern crude imports normally pass through Hormuz, the gap between a diplomatic breakthrough and a meaningful restoration of energy flows is expected to extend far beyond the tentative 30-day reopening timeline. According to Korea International Trade Association data, South Korea's crude imports fell 22.8 percent on-year in April to about 8.46 million tons, while imports from the Middle East plunged 37.3 percent to 4.49 million tons amid the Hormuz disruption. The Middle East still accounted for the largest share of South Korea's oil imports, but its portion dropped sharply to 53.1 percent from 65.2 percent a year earlier. Imports from Saudi Arabia, Korea's largest supplier, fell 37.6 percent to roughly 2.15 million tons. Iraqi shipments dropped 42.4 percent, while imports from Kuwait nearly collapsed, plunging 98.2 percent. Imports from Qatar were halted entirely. The data underscore how rapidly Asian importers have been forced to redraw supply chains as the Hormuz crisis deepened. The United States, already South Korea's second-largest crude supplier, nearly overtook Saudi Arabia last month. Imports of U.S. crude rose 13.4 percent to about 2.145 million tons, narrowing the gap with Saudi shipments to barely 1,000 tons from more than 1.45 million tons just a month earlier. Seoul has also accelerated diversification toward North America, Oceania and Africa. Imports from Australia surged 89 percent, while Canadian shipments more than tripled. Crude purchases from African producers including Nigeria and Mozambique jumped more than fivefold. North America's share of South Korea's crude imports climbed to 28.3 percent, up 10.3 percentage points from a year earlier. Still, industry analysts caution that reopening the strait would mark only the beginning of a lengthy normalization process. Mine-clearance operations, military escort requirements and a backlog of roughly 1,500 stranded vessels are expected to delay normal shipping flows by another two to three weeks even after transit resumes. "Fully loaded tankers must first pass through, and empty vessels must then enter and drain the stockpiles before oil-producing states can resume output," said Yoon Jae-sung, analyst at Hana Securities. "Given that a voyage to Asia takes four weeks and that 30 to 40 percent of Gulf refining capacity has been damaged — with normalization expected to take at least three months — restoring the supply chain will require considerable time," Yoon said. "Crude oil and gas would take priority, pushing petrochemical products and naphtha further down the queue." Shipping costs have also surged. According to Lloyd's Joint War Committee data, war-risk insurance premiums for very large crude carriers transiting the Gulf have climbed to roughly eight times pre-crisis levels, with single-voyage coverage now costing around $2.5 million per tanker. Six major protection and indemnity insurers, including Gard, Skuld and North Standard, have withdrawn Hormuz transit coverage altogether. South Korean petrochemical firms have partially stabilized operations by increasing naphtha cracking center utilization rates to 85–90 percent of prewar levels through alternative sourcing from Russia, Kazakhstan and the United States. But officials continue warning that liquefied natural gas markets could tighten sharply in the second half as bargaining power shifts back toward suppliers. Compounding concerns, QatarEnergy's force majeure declaration on long-term LNG contracts remains in effect after damage to two production trains at Ras Laffan affected roughly 17 percent of Qatar's LNG exports. Full restoration is expected to take between three and five years. "Unless the war ends on reasonable and viable terms good enough to convince shipowners and insurance companies, it may be extremely difficult for oil prices to return to post-war levels even in the long run," said Chung Tae-hun, associate research fellow at the Korea Energy Economics Institute. "We still face competition for heavy crude supplies outside the Middle East if the conflict becomes entrenched, with China and Japan also aggressively seeking alternative sourcing," Chung added. A diplomatic breakthrough could mark a turning point in the crisis. But for South Korea and much of Asia, the broader energy shock is increasingly shifting from an emergency disruption into a structural adjustment — one likely to leave elevated shipping costs, higher energy premiums and intensified competition for non-Gulf supplies well into 2027. 2026-05-26 15:36:03 -
Korea's red-hot rally demands a cooler head SEOUL, May 24 (AJP) - South Korea's stock market has moved to the center of the global financial conversation. The country once defined by the "Korea discount" — that catch-all phrase for chronic undervaluation — is now one of the hottest markets that international investment banks and the financial press are watching. The Financial Times noted recently that the speed of Korea's rally has outpaced even the U.S. Nasdaq's climb during the late-1990s dotcom boom. The benchmark KOSPI has tripled in roughly 18 months, breaking through 7,200 after starting last year near 2,400. That ascent is steeper, by the FT's measure, than the comparable stretch of Nasdaq's bubble-era run. At the heart of the rally sit Samsung Electronics and SK hynix. The artificial intelligence build-out, surging global data center CAPEX, and a step-change in demand for high-bandwidth memory (HBM) have driven both companies to record earnings. Samsung Electronics has gained about 130 percent this year. SK hynix is up close to 170 percent. Their combined market capitalization now exceeds South Korea's gross domestic product — a milestone with few, if any, precedents in the country's economic history. But the hotter the market, the more valuable a cool head becomes. As the FT pointed out, this rally differs from the dotcom episode in one important respect. Nasdaq in 1999 was driven by expectations and multiple expansion, not earnings. Korea's chip rally, by contrast, is being delivered alongside real profit growth. Analysts argue that the global AI infrastructure build is restructuring the memory industry itself. That is why Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Citigroup have kept raising their KOSPI targets. Memory, long treated as a textbook cyclical, is increasingly being repriced as a structural growth industry inside the larger AI shift. The problem is balance. Korea's rally is dangerously concentrated. Strip out Samsung and SK hynix and a large share of the market remains in the doldrums. Small- and mid-cap value names are being passed over by liquidity, and the real economy bears little resemblance to the euphoria on the tape. In other words, what we are watching is not a broad-based rise in Korea Inc. so much as a hyper-concentrated rally in AI-linked semiconductors. History rewards remembering. Markets overheat in optimism and then forget risk inside that overheating. Korea is also structurally retail-heavy: the so-called "ant army" of individual investors has been a defining force in this rally, with money once parked in U.S. equities flowing back into Samsung and SK hynix. The worry is that margin debt — "bittu," money borrowed to chase the trade — is growing fast. During Korea's housing mania, people said "this time is different." The conviction that Seoul apartment prices could only rise pulled households into ever-larger loans, and ended in extreme volatility. Stocks are no different. Share prices reflect future cash flows, but markets never move in straight lines. The AI revolution is real; the corrections and drawdowns inside that revolution will be just as real. Foreign flows deserve particular attention. The Korean market is structurally dependent on foreign capital, which provides powerful thrust on the way up but is also the first to leave when risk appetite turns. U.S. interest rate policy, a global growth slowdown, U.S.-China tensions, Taiwan Strait risk and the Middle East — any of these external variables can amplify Korean volatility at short notice. In a market this concentrated in one sector and a handful of names, even a small shock can land outsized. The deeper concern is that the psychology of the market is drifting from investing toward chasing. Once "if I don't buy now I'll be left behind" replaces cold analysis of earnings and industry change, the warning lights come on. The risk is sharpest when retail investors lever up to crowd into a narrow group of stocks. And yet this rally cannot be dismissed as a simple bubble. Korean equities still trade cheaply against U.S. peers. Bloomberg data cited by the FT put the KOSPI's forward price-to-earnings ratio in the 8x range — less than half that of the S&P 500. Nearly half of listed Korean companies still trade below a price-to-book ratio of one. The country has not, in other words, fully escaped its structural discount. What matters from here is direction. For Korea to graduate into a genuinely mature capital market, it cannot ride on two stocks alone. Small- and mid-caps, value names, biotech, robotics, defense, shipbuilding, content and software all need to participate. The market's overall fitness has to improve. That is also why the government's corporate governance reforms and its low-PBR value-up program matter. Done well, they should raise trust in the capital market and strengthen the system as a whole. Above all, what Korea needs now is a sense of balance. The AI revolution is opening a genuine era of industrial transformation, and Korea's semiconductor industry sits at its center. But every market mania casts a shadow. Investors must price risk even when feeling optimistic. Government must stress-test the system even in a bull market. Companies must build long-term competitiveness rather than get drunk on their share price. The world is watching Korea's market. Whether this surge becomes the opening chapter of the country's industrial renaissance — or simply another entry in the ledger of extreme volatility — depends on the choices made from here. 2026-05-24 16:44:42 -
Consumer group urges Starbucks to fully refund prepaid balances SEOUL, May 22 (AJP) - The Korea National Council of Consumer Organizations urged Starbucks Korea to refund prepaid card balances in full and without conditions to customers who no longer wish to use the chain, as a consumer boycott over a controversial marketing campaign deepens. The civic group on Friday also called on regulators and lawmakers to overhaul what it described as an unreasonable refund regime for prepaid stored-value cards. Under Starbucks' current terms, customers must spend at least 60 percent of a charged balance before the remainder can be refunded. That threshold is rooted in the Fair Trade Commission (FTC)'s standard terms for new-type gift certificates and the Electronic Financial Transactions Act, which require users of fixed-amount vouchers to spend at least 60 percent — or 80 percent for vouchers worth 10,000 won ($6.59) or less — before reclaiming the balance. "Starbucks must improve its system so that refunds can be processed without visiting a store, easing the burden on store staff," the council said in a statement, adding that the FTC and the National Assembly should swiftly amend the relevant rules. The backlash erupted after Starbucks Korea launched its "Tank Day" promotion on May 18, the 46th anniversary of the Gwangju Democratization Movement, using slogans including "tap on the desk" — phrases critics say evoked the 1980 military crackdown in Gwangju and the 1987 torture death of student activist Park Jong-chul. The boycott has since spread to other Shinsegae affiliates and prompted a surge in app deletions and prepaid card refunds. Starbucks Korea's cash and cash equivalents stand at about 137.4 billion won, equivalent to roughly 32 percent of its prepaid liabilities — meaning available cash could be exhausted if just one in three customers demanded refunds simultaneously. 2026-05-22 17:22:38 -
Korean farm income hits record on livestock rebound SEOUL, May 22 (AJP) - South Korean farm households earned an average of 54.67 million won ($36,017) in 2025, a record high driven by a sharp recovery in livestock and crop prices, while fishery households saw their incomes slide on weaker seaweed and abalone markets. According data of last year's farm and fishery household economy released by the Ministry of Data and Statistics on Friday, average annual farm income climbed 8.0 percent from a year earlier to 54.67 million won — the highest level since the ministry began compiling the data. Agricultural income alone surged 22.3 percent to 11.71 million won, powered by an 8.3 percent jump in gross farm receipts that outpaced a 3.4 percent rise in operating costs. Livestock revenue soared 28.5 percent, while crop revenue edged up 1.1 percent. "Farm receipts had temporarily contracted in 2024 due to falling rice and livestock prices, but prices rebounded last year and pushed receipts back into growth," said the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs, adding that firmer prices for certain fruit crops also lifted the headline figure. Transfer income, which includes government subsidies, rose 9.1 percent to a record 19.89 million won on the back of higher direct payments to farmers and an increase in the maximum monthly basic pension to 342,510 won. By farming type, livestock households led the gains with income jumping 64.0 percent to 88.39 million won, followed by fruit growers and rice farmers, while vegetable producers saw a 3.2 percent decline. Fishery households, by contrast, posted average income of 58.98 million won, down 7.3 percent from a year earlier as what the ministry explained as base effect from 2024's record seaweed prices unwound and abalone prices weakened. Fishery income tumbled 31.6 percent to 19.06 million won, with aquaculture revenue plunging 26.3 percent even as catch-based revenue rose 9.0 percent. Average farm household assets reached 662.85 million won at the end of 2025, up 7.6 percent, while debt rose 6.0 percent to 47.71 million won, reflecting increased borrowing tied to smart farm investments and policy-loan deferrals for disaster-hit producers. 2026-05-22 15:54:16 -
Samsung Biologics wins court penalty against union strike SEOUL, May 22 (AJP) - A South Korean court has ordered Samsung Biologics' labor union to pay 20 million won ($13,196) every time it violates an injunction restricting strike action at sensitive bioreactor lines, escalating a legal standoff at the world's largest contract drugmaker. Reports on Friday said the Incheon District Court granted Samsung Biologics' application for indirect compulsion against the union. The ruling reinforces an earlier injunction that bars union leaders from directing members on certain essential production lines to stop work or from circulating related instructions. The court had initially declined to attach financial penalties to the March injunction after the union pledged to abide by it. That pledge unraveled on April 27, when union leadership distributed a "strike guidance procedure" to members and roughly 300 employees assigned to court-restricted processes joined the subsequent walkout, prompting the company to refile. Samsung Biologics had sought 100 million won per violation, but the court awarded a fifth of that amount. "The union must not, during the period of industrial action based on the March 29, 2026 strike vote, instruct members to halt court-designated processes or distribute related guidelines," the bench said in its order. Industry observers said the decision underscores the unique vulnerability of biologic drug manufacturing, where even brief stoppages at fermentation or purification stages can spoil raw materials and finished products worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The company is separately appealing to expand the injunction's scope to cover its entire production footprint. The Samsung Biologics dispute stands apart from the wage standoff at affiliate Samsung Electronics, where its union on Wednesday suspended an 18-day general strike that had been scheduled to begin Thursday and run through June 7. Union members at Samsung Electronics will vote on the tentative wage agreement from Friday through May 27, while Samsung Biologics remains locked in litigation over the scope and enforcement of its own injunction. 2026-05-22 14:17:07 -
Samyang to court Southeast Asia at Bangkok food fair SEOUL, May 22 (AJP) - Samyang Foods will showcase its spicy noodle lineup at THAIFEX-Anuga Asia 2026, Asia's largest food and beverage trade fair, as the Korean instant ramen maker pushes deeper into Southeast Asia's fast-growing snack market. The five-day exhibition runs from May 26 to 30 at IMPACT Muang Thong Thani in Bangkok. Now in its 21st year, the fair last year drew about 88,000 visitors from 143 countries and 3,231 exhibitors from 57 nations, according to organizers. Samyang announced Friday that it will operate an experiential booth themed "Samyang Crave Lab," staging its flagship Buldak alongside newer brands MEP and Tangle in separate "brand labs" designed to walk visitors through each line's identity and flavor profile. Sampling sessions throughout the day will feature staples such as the original Buldak, Buldak Carbonara and the newly launched Buldak Swicy, and localized offerings including a chili-chicken-cilantro ramen and grilled garlic shrimp ramen tailored to Southeast Asian palates. Canapés made with Buldak sauce will also be served. "We focused on designing a space where visitors can taste, enjoy and immerse themselves in Samyang's brands rather than simply view products on display," said a Samyang Foods spokesperson, adding that the company will keep widening its Southeast Asian footprint through differentiated brands including MEP and Tangle on top of Buldak. 2026-05-22 10:54:30 -
Hanwha Qcells to supply modules for South Korea's largest solar project SEOUL, May 21 (AJP) - Hanwha Solutions' Qcells division announced it will supply high-efficiency solar cells and modules for a 400-megawatt solar power project being developed by Korea South-East Power (KOSEP), the largest solar installation ever built on a single site in South Korea. The plant, set to rise across about 4.63 square kilometers of land in Haenam County, South Jeolla Province, is scheduled for completion in June 2028. KOSEP selected a preferred EPC (engineering, procurement and construction) contractor for the project on Tuesday, one day before the announcement. The chosen EPC firm will install about 640,000 solar modules incorporating cells manufactured exclusively at Hanwha Qcells' production facility in Jincheon, North Chungcheong Province — the company's largest domestic manufacturing base. "This project offered an opportunity to demonstrate the competitiveness of Korean-made solar technology on a large scale," said Yu Jae-yeol, head of Hanwha Qcells' Korea business division, adding that sustained policy support for domestic renewable energy and locally produced components could help restore the country's solar supply chain and drive further investment. The project arrives as South Korea pushes to expand its renewable energy capacity, with domestic manufacturers seeking to reclaim ground in a market long pressured by low-cost overseas competition. 2026-05-21 16:58:15
