logo
Seoul shares hit 4-yr high despite US tariff uncertainty

Seoul shares hit 4-yr high despite US tariff uncertainty

Korea Heralda day ago
South Korean stocks climbed to the highest level in nearly four years Tuesday, buoyed by strong foreign buying, as last-minute negotiations are under way between Seoul and Washington over the Donald Trump administration's aggressive tariff scheme. The local currency fell against the US dollar.
The benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index added 21.05 points, or 0.66 percent, to close at 3,230.57, extending its winning streak to a fifth session.
The reading marks the highest level since Aug. 19, 2021, when the index finished at 3,243.19.
Trade volume was moderate at 369.74 million shares worth 12.66 trillion won (US$9.09 billion), with winners beating losers 468 to 409.
The index opened lower as investors await key developments in tariff talks, with just three days remaining until the Aug. 1 deadline for a deal before the US starts imposing reciprocal tariffs, including a 25 percent duty for South Korea. The Kospi soon turned higher on the back of solid foreign buying and maintained the momentum.
Offshore and institutional investors bought a net 604.78 billion won and 116.98 billion won worth of shares, respectively, while retail investors sold a net 827 billion won.
"The domestic stock market is expected to continue showing sectoral divergence amid a wait-and-see stance ahead of a tariff deal," said Han Ji-young, a researcher at Kiwoom Securities.
Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol said that he would try to derive a "mutually beneficial" agreement with the United States as he left for Washington to meet with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Thursday (US time).
Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan and Trade Minister Yeo Han-koo continued to engage in intensive negotiations with their US counterparts, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer.
Most big-cap shares gathered ground.
Market bellwether Samsung Electronics rose 0.28 percent to 70,600 won, while chip giant SK hynix added 0.19 percent to 262,500 won.
Major battery maker LG Energy Solution surged 3.02 percent to 392,000 won, and leading pharmaceutical firm Samsung Biologics advanced 1.97 percent to 1.09 million won.
Defense giant Hanwha Aerospace soared 4.72 percent to 998,000 won, and nuclear power plant manufacturer Doosan Enerbility climbed 2.52 percent to 65,100 won. Top financial firm KB Financial went up 0.72 percent to 111,300 won.
Carmakers ended mixed. Top automaker Hyundai Motor shed 0.23 percent to 218,000 won, while its sister Kia gained 0.19 percent to 105,700 won.
Leading shipbuilder HD Hyundai Heavy jumped 1.94 percent to 473,500 won, while its rival Hanwha Ocean lost 0.82 percent to 96,800 won.
The local currency was quoted at 1,391.0 won against the greenback at 3:30 p.m., down 9.0 won from the previous session. (Yonhap)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Toss Bank logs W31.6tr in fee-free forex transactions
Toss Bank logs W31.6tr in fee-free forex transactions

Korea Herald

timean hour ago

  • Korea Herald

Toss Bank logs W31.6tr in fee-free forex transactions

Internet-only South Korean lender Toss Bank has recorded 31.6 trillion won ($22.8 billion) in foreign exchange volume just 18 months after launching the service, driven by its zero-fee policy and rapidly expanding user base. The number of users has reached 2.67 million, with sign-ups peaking at 33,000 per minute, the lender said. The milestone follows Toss Bank's rollout of the country's first permanent fee-free forex service in January 2024. While other banks had experimented with temporary promotions, Toss Bank committed to a 'fee-free for life' model from the start. Usage spans generations, with users in their 20s accounting for 28 percent, followed by those in their 30s at 25 percent, 40s at 23 percent and 50s at 19 percent. Notably, around 130 users were in their 90s, many of them high-net-worth individuals using the platform for investment purposes. The bank estimated that, had the service imposed a 1 percent fee, users would have paid roughly 300 billion won in total, translating to an average saving of 165,000 won per customer, according to the bank. Toss Bank added that 870,000 users have used its overseas payment service, which supports both online and offline transactions as well as ATM withdrawals for cardholders. Of these, 500,000 used the service in Japan, followed by Vietnam, the US, Thailand and Taiwan.

Flavor fight: Korea's top ramyeon makers bring soup bases in-house
Flavor fight: Korea's top ramyeon makers bring soup bases in-house

Korea Herald

timean hour ago

  • Korea Herald

Flavor fight: Korea's top ramyeon makers bring soup bases in-house

Samyang, Nongshim snap up sauce suppliers amid export boom The fierce rivalry between South Korean instant noodle giants Nongshim and Samyang Foods is flaring up again. This time, it's over control of a closely guarded flavor secret: the soup base. Samyang Foods, the maker of the global hit Buldak noodle series, was the first to make a move, with a 60 billion won ($43 million) stock purchase deal currently in the works to acquire local sauce maker GnF. The local sauce manufacturer has long supplied powdered seasonings to major food companies, including Nongshim, Pulmuone and Ottogi. Last year, it posted 41.7 billion won in revenue and 3.2 billion won in operating profit. If the deal goes through, it would mark Samyang's first merger and acquisition exceeding 50 billion won since its founding in 1961. 'The acquisition has not been finalized, including its timeline,' a company official said. 'We are still reviewing various aspects of the deal.' Yet the move is widely seen as a preemptive strike to secure production capacity amid soaring export demand. Until now, Samyang Foods has largely relied on original equipment manufacturers to produce its liquid and powdered soup bases. The acquisition, industry insiders say, would allow the company to fast-track cost savings by making key ingredients in-house. The deal could also send ripples through the industry, as rival clients previously supplied by GnF may now be forced to seek alternative sources for their seasonings. Meanwhile, Nongshim Holdings, the parent company of food and beverage giant Nongshim, announced last Friday that it will acquire 100 percent of local sauce maker Sewoo for nearly 100 billion won in August. Sewoo, known for its family ties to Nongshim Chairman Shin Dong-won, has been a key supplier of soup ingredients for Nongshim's flagship product Shin Ramyun. The company recorded 136.8 billion won in revenue and 10.6 billion won in operating profit last year. With the acquisition, Nongshim is expected to strengthen its in-house capabilities in seasoning and sauce production, enhancing both product quality and manufacturing efficiency. 'We decided to acquire Sewoo to reinforce synergies across our food manufacturing supply chain and boost product competitiveness,' a Nongshim Holdings official said, adding that the group plans to continue expanding its food business through strategic acquisitions. With global demand for Korean ramyeon rising and pressures mounting from stricter quality standards and supply chain instability overseas, in-house soup production offers a strategic hedge for ingredient stability and cost control, according to industry officials. 'Bringing it in-house allows for more precise control and easier adaptation to overseas markets,' one industry insider said. 'Given ramyeon's heavy reliance on the soup base for taste and quality, it not only helps prevent technology leaks but also secures a stable supply chain." Samyang Foods generated nearly 80 percent of its total revenue from overseas markets last year, while Nongshim earned just under 40 percent of its revenue abroad. Soup bases, known for their complex blend of ingredients, signal a broader shift in how Korea's food conglomerates approach sauce production, as even a minor change in formulation can dramatically alter the flavor. 'Soup bases also have broad applications beyond ramyeon, including in frozen foods and the wider seasoning market,' another industry official noted.

Korea's AI sovereignty hopes face test under new US push
Korea's AI sovereignty hopes face test under new US push

Korea Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Korea Herald

Korea's AI sovereignty hopes face test under new US push

Trump's AI action plan sparks concerns of US dominance, threatening Seoul's W240b efforts to build independent AI infrastructure As US President Donald Trump signed an executive order last week unveiling an 'AI action plan' to maintain America's dominance in artificial intelligence, concerns are rising that the move could undermine South Korea's ambitions to build its sovereign AI ecosystem. According to industry sources on Wednesday, the Trump administration's plan, signed on July 23, triggered a rapid response from China, which announced its own global AI governance initiative just three days later. At the heart of the US plan is a push to develop and export a full-stack AI package — including high-performance GPUs, servers, software and foundation models — designed to encourage or "ensure" allied nations adopt US AI technologies and standards. Korean experts warn that this could pose a serious challenge to Seoul's sovereign AI strategy, which centers on developing a national foundation model capable of achieving at least 95 percent of the performance of global leading models. The Lee Jae Myung administration is currently conducting a competitive selection process to identify 'national representative AI teams,' with up to 240 billion won ($173 million) in funding allocated for the winners. A recent report by the Korea AI Software Industry Association (KOSA) assessed that 'the US AI action plan could become an obstacle to Korea's AI self-reliance,' citing the risk of domestic firms being relegated to downstream roles, such as app development, within a US-centric AI platform structure. 'If key AI models and platforms are controlled by the US, Korean companies may find themselves merely feeding applications into foreign ecosystems,' the KOSA report read. In response, the Ministry of Science and ICT said accelerating the development of domestic foundation models and securing key resources such as AI talent and GPU computing power are vital countermeasures to the evolving global landscape. 'Completing our sovereign AI ecosystem as swiftly as possible is the best defense,' a ministry official said. 'We will fine-tune our strategy based on the capabilities of the selected national AI teams.' President Trump's recent remarks emphasizing the easing of regulations on AI are also expected to have an impact on Korea's implementation of its AI Framework Act. Korea became the second country in the world, following the European Union, to pass a comprehensive AI law, which is set to go into effect next year. While some industry insiders say that Korean startups could benefit from narrowing the tech gap by leveraging open-source models promoted by the US, they also caution that such dependency could leave Korea vulnerable to future geopolitical and technological shifts. 'One cannot deny the efficiency of utilizing some US technologies,' said an industry source who requested anonymity. 'But to avoid external vulnerabilities, Korea must acquire the full spectrum of capabilities required for AI sovereignty — from models to infrastructure and platforms. Striking a balance between national independence and global collaboration will be the key to Korea's future AI policy.' Experts also stress the importance of diplomatic finesse in minimizing potential conflicts around AI governance while safeguarding Korea's technological sovereignty. 'A two-track strategy may be necessary,' said Lee Jae-sung, professor of the Department of AI at Chung-Ang University. 'In the early stages, actively using open-source tools can help close the gap with big tech. Over the long term, however, we need to transition to domestic solutions and build an independent AI base.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store