Journalist

AJP
  • Kookmin University completes global leadership camp with United Nations University in Tokyo
    Kookmin University completes global leadership camp with United Nations University in Tokyo SEOUL, February 20 (AJP) - The HUSS Global Symbiosis Project Group at Kookmin University successfully conducted the KMU x UNU Sustainable Global Leader Training Camp in Tokyo from January 26 to February 1, the prominent university located in Seoul said on Thursday. The program was developed in collaboration with the United Nations University (UNU) to provide a field-based educational model focused on international organizations. It featured the UNU Future Leaders Bootcamp, expert lectures, a mock UN Security Council negotiation simulation, a visit to Tokyo City University, and various social contribution activities based on environmental, social, and governance (ESG) principles. The initiative was designed to move beyond theoretical classroom learning by immersing students in the operational environments of global institutions. By partnering with UNU, the university aimed to provide undergraduate students with direct exposure to international diplomacy and sustainable development strategies. During the Future Leaders Bootcamp held at UNU, participants studied the structure of the United Nations system and the implementation strategies for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). A central component of the camp was a simulation of a UN Security Council session held at Elizabeth Rose Hall. Students engaged in a mock negotiation regarding the crisis in Venezuela, practicing country-specific strategy formulation, informal consultations, and the voting process for resolutions. The curriculum also included a lecture by Professor Lim Hwa-jin of Tokyo City University on urban planning and smart city cases in Japan. This was followed by a field trip to the Shinjuku district, where Kookmin University students worked alongside local Japanese students to observe urban infrastructure and public space design. Participants engaged in practical ESG activities, including a project to improve language accessibility for Korean history exhibits at the Koryo Museum of Art in Tokyo. They also conducted benchmarking studies of the Japanese environmental non-profit organization Greenbird and took part in the Green Store Observer Program. Following the completion of the field activities, the university held a contest for posters and short-form videos to allow students to document and share their findings. According to internal university data, all 30 participants reported a maximum satisfaction score of five out of five, stating they would recommend the program to others. Professor Lim Young-bin of the Department of Public Administration, who led the program, stated that the university has established an integrated global education model where students learn at international organizations, verify concepts in urban settings, and practice social responsibility. He noted that the university plans to further develop this into a flagship global exchange program. The HUSS Global Symbiosis Consortium is a three-year initiative supported by 9 billion won in funding from the Ministry of Education and the National Research Foundation of Korea. Since 2024, Kookmin University has collaborated with Kwangwoon University, Sun Moon University, Yeungnam University, and Honam University under this consortium. The group aims to train 2,500 experts capable of addressing global resource challenges, industrial sustainability, and international social inclusion. 2026-02-20 13:59:44
  • SK hynix shares gain traction after BlackRock lifts stake to 5%
    SK hynix shares gain traction after BlackRock lifts stake to 5% SEOUL, February 20 (AJP) -Shares of SK hynix gained momentum after the world’s largest asset manager, BlackRock, raised its stake in the chipmaker above the 5 percent threshold for the first time in nearly eight years, according to a regulatory filing. BlackRock’s increased exposure comes as global investors seek to capitalize on the artificial intelligence boom, with SK hynix emerging as a dominant supplier of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) used in AI accelerators. A disclosure filed with Korea’s Financial Supervisory Service showed that BlackRock Fund Advisors and its related parties held 36,407,157 shares in SK hynix as of Feb. 10, equivalent to a 5.00 percent stake. The holding rose by 100,808 shares, or 0.01 percentage point, from the previous report on Feb. 9, when the group owned 36,306,349 shares, or 4.99 percent. The total number of voting shares outstanding stood at 728,002,365. The filing noted that the shares are owned by various funds managed by BlackRock and its affiliates, with the firm acting as an investment adviser and deemed holder. It also stated that none of the individual funds or clients independently holds a 5 percent stake. This marks the first time since May 9, 2018 that BlackRock’s aggregate holding in SK hynix has exceeded the 5 percent level. Market observers say international funds have been shifting capital away from the U.S. toward higher-return, technology-focused Asian markets, particularly South Korea and Japan. Korean memory chipmakers have emerged as key beneficiaries of the trend, riding what analysts describe as a once-in-decades boom driven by extremely tight supply and explosive demand for AI-related memory products, especially HBM. Both SK hynix and Samsung Electronics have posted strong rallies this year, rising about 35 percent and over 50 percent, respectively, on expectations of sustained earnings growth fueled by AI investment. Compared with early 2025, SK hynix’s share price has risen nearly fivefold, while Samsung Electronics’ stock has more than tripled. As of 2:00 p.m.. SK hynix shares climbed 6.38 percent to 951,500 won, moving closer to the symbolic 1-million-won mark. 2026-02-20 13:59:05
  • BNK Kyongnam Bank Launches Productive Finance Council, CEO Kim Tae-han to Lead
    BNK Kyongnam Bank Launches Productive Finance Council, CEO Kim Tae-han to Lead BNK Kyongnam Bank said Thursday it has launched a “Productive Finance Implementation Council.” The council is chaired by Kyongnam Bank CEO Kim Tae-han and is made up of four groups: the Innovation Growth Finance Center, the Innovation Finance Support Division, the Future Growth Investment Division and the Regional Value-Up Division. The council held its first meeting at the bank’s headquarters, attended by Kim, division heads and department leaders. Agenda items included sharing the status of key productive and inclusive finance initiatives, advancing external activities such as business cooperation agreements (MOUs) with institutions and local governments, and refining the organization’s operating structure. The bank said it will strengthen funding support for local industries and companies and seek opportunities to participate in policy and state-led projects to help foster and revitalize region-specific industries. The bank also said it is actively promoting “regional productive finance,” a 4.3 trillion won program that broadly supports future-growth and innovative companies, region-specific industries, and local self-employed business owners and small and midsize firms. Under the plan, the bank will provide tailored financing by growth stage for leading local companies and firms relocating to the region, including facility investment and trade finance, overseas expansion and shared growth with partner companies. It will offer additional interest-rate discounts to ease financing burdens for 11 advanced strategic industries, including artificial intelligence, semiconductors, secondary batteries, robotics, and aerospace and defense. It also plans to expand support for regional specialized industries such as maritime, shipbuilding, defense, logistics and aerospace. “For regional growth, we need a productive finance model that creates value beyond the scale of financial support,” Kim said. “As a reliable partner that grows with the region, we will continue to do our best to create regional value.” * This article has been translated by AI. 2026-02-20 13:42:00
  • Volkswagen Korea Launches ‘Feel & Drive’ Test-Drive Campaign for Atlas SUV
    Volkswagen Korea Launches ‘Feel & Drive’ Test-Drive Campaign for Atlas SUV Volkswagen Korea said Feb. 20 it selected the Atlas large SUV as its February featured vehicle for its customer-participation social test-drive campaign, “Feel & Drive.” Feel & Drive is a recurring program that lets customers take an in-depth drive of Volkswagen’s core models each month, including the Golf, Atlas and Touareg, tailored to individual lifestyles. The program offers a 3-night, 4-day test drive, including a weekend, aimed at highlighting the vehicles’ detailed strengths and the finish of German engineering, the company said. The February model, the Atlas, is positioned as a large SUV with one of the biggest body sizes in its class and a roomy cabin, along with powerful driving performance and a broad set of advanced convenience and safety features. Built on German engineering and space efficiency proven in the U.S. market, the Atlas was also named the “2026 Internal Combustion SUV of the Year” by the Korea Automobile Writers Association (AWAK). Winners of the test-drive campaign will be able to drive the Atlas from March 6 to 9. Applications are open through Feb. 22 by leaving a comment matching the theme on the event post on Volkswagen’s official Instagram channel. Winners will be announced Feb. 23. “Atlas is a versatile family SUV with strong driving performance and solid stability, and customers will be able to experience its true value through a deep, 3-night, 4-day test,” said Shin Dong-hyeop, executive director of marketing communications at Volkswagen Korea. “This year as well, we will provide Volkswagen’s differentiated customer experience through the Feel & Drive campaign across our lineup.”* This article has been translated by AI. 2026-02-20 13:03:18
  • Samsung Heavy Wins $268 Million Order for One LNG Carrier
    Samsung Heavy Wins $268 Million Order for One LNG Carrier Samsung Heavy Industries said in a regulatory filing on Thursday that it won an order for one liquefied natural gas carrier from an Oceania-based shipowner for 368 billion won. The vessel is scheduled to be delivered by May 2028. The company’s year-to-date orders total eight ships worth $1.9 billion, reaching 14% of its annual target of $13.9 billion. By vessel type, the orders include three LNG carriers, two ethane carriers, two container ships and one crude oil carrier, for a total of eight ships. The tally reflects a $400 million increase tied to a preliminary contract for offshore production facility pre-work that the company disclosed on Feb. 13. “Since the start of the year, orders for LNG carriers have continued smoothly,” a company official said, adding that Samsung Heavy plans to maintain a selective order strategy focused on high-value ships.* This article has been translated by AI. 2026-02-20 12:09:14
  • K-pop girl band Hearts2Hearts to drop new single RUDE!
    K-pop girl band Hearts2Hearts to drop new single 'RUDE!' SEOUL, February 20 (AJP) -K-pop girl band Hearts2Hearts will release a new single "RUDE!" on Friday to celebrate its first anniversary. Along with the new song, its music video will also be released through the SMTOWN YouTube channel. SM Entertainment said in a statement that the eight-member band's new track RUDE!, a synth house dance track, will be released at 6:00 p.m. (0900 GMT) through various music and video platforms. The band's agency said that the new track offers a different vibe compared to "FOCUS," Hearts2Hearts' cool and chic house-based song relesed in October last year. The group is set to unveil the very first actual performance stage of RUDE! during the band's fan meeting "2026 Hearts2Hearts FANMEETING HEARTS 2 HOUSE," scheduled for Feb. 21 and 22 at Olympic Hall in Seoul's Olympic Park. The group is also to meet international fans through a North American showcase in New York on Mar. 19 and Los Angeles on Mar. 22, followed by a fan meeting in Jakarta on Mar. 28. 2026-02-20 11:30:13
  • KOSPI unfazed by geopolitical risks in its record-setting winning streak
    KOSPI unfazed by geopolitical risks in its record-setting winning streak SEOUL, February 20 (AJP)- South Korean shares extended their relentless rally in early Friday trading, brushing off global market weakness and rising geopolitical tensions between the United States and Iran. The benchmark KOSPI surged past the 5,700 mark to set another record high. As of 10:50 a.m., the index was up 1.26 percent at 5,748.65. The tech-heavy KOSDAQ slipped 0.25 percent to 1,157.77. In regional markets, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index opened lower after a holiday break, falling 0.27 percent to 26,633.60 as of 9:31 a.m. local time. Wall Street retreated overnight as concerns grew over a potential U.S. strike on Iran. With nuclear negotiations between Washington and Tehran showing little progress, reports that the U.S. military had reinforced its assets in the Middle East weighed on investor sentiment. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.54 percent, the S&P 500 lost 0.28 percent, and the Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.31 percent. Despite the global pullback, brokerage stocks in Seoul rallied across the board. SK Securities and Sangsangin Investment & Securities hit fresh 52-week highs, jumping 24.89 percent and 20.94 percent, respectively, as of 10:05 a.m. Other major brokerages also posted strong gains, including NH Investment & Securities (11.29 percent), Daishin Securities (7.16 percent), Mirae Asset Securities (4.11 percent), Samsung Securities (5.65 percent) and Kyobo Securities (8.53 percent). The rally was driven by rising trading volumes and growing expectations that a revision to the Commercial Act requiring the cancellation of treasury shares will be approved. The Korean won strengthened slightly, trading at 1,449.40 per dollar, up 1.60 won from the previous session. Investor flows were mixed. Individual and foreign investors sold a net 79.1 billion won and 430.4 billion won worth of shares, respectively, while institutions bought a net 587.6 billion won. Among heavyweight stocks, Samsung Electronics and SK hynix slipped 0.16 percent and 0.67 percent to 189,300 won and 888,000 won, respectively. Battery maker LG Energy Solution rose 0.37 percent to 405,000 won. Meanwhile, nuclear power equipment maker Doosan Enerbility and defense contractor Hanwha Aerospace climbed 6.50 percent and 6.70 percent to 104,800 won and 1,226,000 won, respectively. Financial and biotech stocks also advanced. Samsung Life Insurance jumped 7.18 percent to 224,000 won, while Samsung Biologics added 0.87 percent to 1,735,000 won. Automakers showed mixed performance. Hyundai Motor fell 0.78 percent to 509,000 won, while affiliate Kia gained 0.29 percent to 170,500 won. Shipbuilders were among the gainers. HD Hyundai Heavy Industries jumped 2.61 percent to 589,000 won, and Hanwha Ocean climbed 2.70 percent to 144,400 won. In Tokyo, Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 1.17 percent to 56,796.91. China’s Shanghai market is set to resume trading next Tuesday following the holiday break. 2026-02-20 11:13:36
  • New IBK CEO Jang Min-young Pledges 300 Trillion Won in ‘Productive Finance’ and AI Shift
    New IBK CEO Jang Min-young Pledges 300 Trillion Won in ‘Productive Finance’ and AI Shift ‘A 37-year IBK veteran,’ new IBK Industrial Bank of Korea CEO Jang Min-young began his official duties on Feb. 20, calling for the bank to serve as a catalyst for “productive finance.” He said IBK will expand financing for small and midsize businesses amid low growth and industrial restructuring, while overhauling the bank through AI-driven digital transformation and stronger internal controls. “At a time when our economy faces structural crises of low growth and polarization, we are also confronting upheaval from AI, digital change and an energy transition,” Jang said at the inauguration ceremony. “IBK must play the role of a catalyst for productive finance.” He named three core management priorities: productive finance, trust-based finance and digital transformation. “Over the past 65 years, IBK’s corporate-finance DNA built alongside small and midsize companies is a unique asset no one can replicate,” he said, pledging to “push ahead without disruption” with 300 trillion won in productive finance by 2030. Jang also called for expanding investment in new industries. “With a trained eye, we will identify future industries such as AI and semiconductors and powerfully activate our growth engine,” he said. He pledged broad financial support tailored to a company’s life cycle, “from early-stage startups through growth and maturity.” On digital transformation, Jang said he wants to redefine IBK as an “AI company.” “We will secure AI-based, best-in-class capabilities across all areas and realign our organizational DNA to be AI-friendly,” he said, adding that the bank will combine long-accumulated data with AI to upgrade credit reviews and soundness management. He also described stablecoins as a key technology that could change the capital paradigm and said the bank will review adopting related systems, with safety as a prerequisite. Jang emphasized a shift to trust-based finance as well. “We will build an internal control system that can proactively manage even unseen risks,” he said, signaling tighter risk management. He added that IBK faces the challenge of competing on equal footing with commercial banks while balancing public and commercial roles, and said he will foster a culture of mutual respect and discussion. The ceremony was held about a month after his appointment on Jan. 23, after the bank’s labor union staged a campaign to block employees from reporting to work over overtime pay issues tied to a total wage cap system. Labor and management agreed on Feb. 19 to normalize unpaid allowances, easing the dispute and allowing the bank to move toward normal operations. For his first official schedule, Jang plans to visit a Seoul branch with heavy customer traffic to encourage staff. With his term starting later than planned, he also aims to accelerate the 300 trillion won productive-finance initiative. The government’s National Growth Fund is also expected to expand IBK’s role in areas such as balanced regional development and support for advanced strategic industries, and some observers say his capital-markets background could speed up decisions on large-scale fund investments. Asset quality management is also cited as a key task. Analysts say the bank must stabilize a delinquency rate that rose into the 1% range in the third quarter of last year while continuing support for small merchants and small and midsize businesses. How the new leadership balances expanded support with risk controls is expected to be an early test. * This article has been translated by AI. 2026-02-20 11:09:00
  • US, Chinese fighter jets in brief aerial standoff over West Sea
    US, Chinese fighter jets in brief aerial standoff over West Sea SEOUL, February 20 (AJP) - A brief aerial standoff between U.S. Forces Korea (USFK) aircraft and Chinese fighter jets occurred over the West Sea earlier this week, multiple military sources said on Friday. The faceoff arose when China scrambled its own fighter jets in response to a large-scale air drill conducted by the USFK. According to the sources, about a dozen F-16 fighter jets took off from Osan Air Base in Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi Province last Wednesday and reportedly flew over South Korea's air defense identification zone (KADIZ), prompting China to dispatch its own. Though the encounter briefly raised tensions, neither side was reported to have entered the other's airspace. The air defense identification zone does not constitute territorial airspace but is established in order to identify air traffic. It is common protocol for aircraft to obtain prior permission before entering another country's air defense identification zone. USFK reportedly notified South Korea's military authorities ahead of the drill but did not elaborate on its specific objectives. Some observers said it is unusual for USFK to conduct such a large-scale exercise near China's airspace. 2026-02-20 11:07:51
  • South Koreas AI Basic Act sparks demand for industry-specific compliance guidelines
    South Korea's AI Basic Act sparks demand for industry-specific compliance guidelines SEOUL, February 20 (AJP) - South Korea's Basic Act for AI has taken effect, but businesses are struggling to translate the sweeping legislation into concrete operational practice, prompting growing calls for tailored, industry-specific compliance guidelines. The law imposes transparency obligations and governance requirements on companies deploying generative AI and other artificial intelligence technologies, with administrative penalties including fines for non-compliance. Analysts say firms that demonstrate accountability under the new framework stand to gain a competitive edge in the long run. Despite the government's efforts to ease the transition — including the early release of subordinate regulations — uncertainty on the ground remains unresolved. The AI Basic Act Support Desk, jointly operated by the Ministry of Science and ICT and the Korea AI·Software Industry Association (KOSA), received 172 inquiries within just ten days of opening. The surge in interest is visible in the data. Big data analytics platform Quettai recorded about 16,175 mentions of the "AI Basic Act" keyword in January, a 233 percent jump from the same period a year earlier. Notably, related terms such as "difficult," "complicated," and "ambiguous" ranked among the top associated keywords, signaling widespread confusion over compliance requirements. Industry practitioners argue that a one-size-fits-all approach falls short given the wide variance in how AI is deployed across sectors. The same legal provision can carry different implications depending on the industry, making generic guidance insufficient for frontline decision-making. DeepBrain AI, a domestic generative AI firm, recently published a practical compliance guide tailored to the financial, education, and portal sectors — one example of how industry players are moving to fill the guidance gap left by broad regulatory language. With enforcement now underway, businesses and regulators alike face pressure to move beyond interpretation and toward actionable standards before compliance gaps begin to widen. 2026-02-20 10:51:33