HWANG &
COMPANY, LTD.
T :
+82-31-783-6130/1
F :
+82-31-783-6132
Korea Report - January, 2018.
With SKorea seeking to
thaw frozen ties with NK by holding talks before the opening of the PyeongChang
Winter Olympics , concern is rising
over whether the diplomatic overture would hamper the allies' efforts to
present a united front against NK's nuclear program. Two Koreas reopened a
border hotline in order to restore a channel for direct communication after
years of cross-border tensions, while US President Donald Trump traded barbs
with NK's leader Kim Jong-un over his threat to use a "nuclear
button." Seoul and Washington reiterated they are in close contact and
vowed to resist any attempts by the North to drive a wedge between the allies.
However, Seoul's push for talks may sow dissent in the allies' approach in
dealing with NK.
SKorea is eager to
figure out how to best leverage the PyeongChang Winter Olympics as an opportunity to bring peace and stability to the Korean
Peninsula. One of those ideas is to show the world the two Koreas' delegates
marching together in the opening and closing ceremonies of the
Olympics. However, an unlikely debate has emerged among the people of
SKorea. The Moon administration said the delegates should raise a "Korean
Unification" flag, white flag with blue shape of the Korean Peninsula in
the center. But there are criticisms that such precedent should not be applied
to the PyeongChang Olympics, which SKorea earned the right to host in 2011
following two unsuccessful bids. There is no precedent where the host country
has not raised its own national flag during the opening and closing ceremonies.
Sports Minister Do said two Koreas marched together under the Korean
Unification flag, in 2002 Asian Games held in Busan, where NK sent a massive
group of delegates, including a large cheerleading squad, and a year later, the
Summer Universiade in Daegu.
Korean government said
on 23rd that it will lodge a complaint with the WTO about US President Trump's
decision to slap tariffs on imported washing machines and solar panels produced by Korean manufacturers, expressing confidence the
excessive sanctions will prove invalid. Trade Minister Kim Hyun-chong cited US
safeguards on Korean steel in 2002, anti-dumping duties on washing machines in
2013 and anti-dumping duties on steel pipe in 2014. As its first move, the government is slated to
file a request for consultations to the WTO.
With
the government driven minimum wage for this year raised 16.4% to KW7,530
($7.06) per hour, part-time and
contract jobs have been hit hardest, while prices of products closely related
to the livelihoods of ordinary people are rising. A job website's survey of
1,458 adults looking for part-time employment found that 72% of them expected
more difficulties in finding jobs or worried about being fired in the wake of
the rise in the hourly minimum wage. The government had looked forward to
seeing a virtuous cycle in which raising the minimum wage would increase
household income, followed by an increase in consumption and then in production
and employment. But in reality, the wage hike has affected disadvantaged groups
in the labor market the most.
Exiting from the worst phase of
order drought in 2017, Korean shipbuilding industry is planning to accelerate
the pace of recovery with more orders. Last year, Korean industry led global
merchant vessel market especially in tanker, containership, and LNG segments,
as well as bagging a few significant large deals in the offshore market. The
industry netted deals worth over $21.2 bil. This year, the industry is aiming
for a much higher target, around $29.8 bil plus undisclosed extra. HHI Group
has set its 2018 goal as $13.2 bil for shipbuilding, $1.6 bil for offshore
(HSHI $3.4 bil, HMD $3 bil), showing off great confidence in the market
recovery. The target is much higher than last year's $7.5 bil target and the
final result, $10 bil in shipbuilding segment. The company is also aiming to
make a comeback in offshore business, in which it had secured no new order last
year. SHI, which exceeded last year's target $6.5 bil with $6.9 bil with 28
units, was understood to have set a $7.7 bil goal, but have raised the goal to
even higher $8.2 bil. It will seek any opportunity in both merchant vessel and
offshore business. DSME netted $2.96 bil with 25 units last year and is
planning to win over $5 bil this year. STX O&S is planning to achieve
around 212% of the last year's result in 2018 with $734 mil, 20 units. It will
focus on LNG bunkering vessels, MR product carriers, and small and mid-sized
gas carriers. Sungdong, while they have an internal target and business plan,
cannot be disclosed as due diligence is in progress. The construction of five
115K tankers for Kyklades is understood to be delayed due to the request from
the orderer. Daehan Shipbuilding won 14 units last year at around $530 mil. The
company raised target at 16 units, $700 mil this year, focusing on aframax
tanker market. Daesun have won 14 units at around $260 mil last year and raised
target at 13 units at around $320 mil. It is aiming for small and mid-sized
containerships and tankers. Yeongdo yard of Hanjin HIC is now going all out for
special purpose vessels, or military ships, concealing its target or business
plan. Its Subic yard did not disclose target either.
The Marine Finance Center (MFC) of
Korea will set up and implement a new guideline, which allows low price orders
partly with 'orders below production costs', temporarily by the end of this
year. Shipyards of the country
have been excluded from the RG issue if they fail to meet the
guideline. Amid low price order spree from Chinese and Singaporean yards,
however, the guideline has made the Korean yards more difficult to win new
orders. Under a new guideline, low price orders are allowed partly in Korea
when large-sized shipyards win newbuildings jointly or shipyards score vessels
from their compatriot shipowners. Also, an optimum order criteria is eased
when they win their major ship types such as LNG carriers, FSRUs, ULCs, shuttle
tankers, VLCC. Shipyards which have 10-15 months of order cover are
capable of winning newbuildings at prices 2-3% lower than productions costs. As
for those which have less than 10 months of order cover, their contract prices
are allowed to be lower up to 6% than production costs.
TOPICS.
Two Koreas agreed on
the joint participation in the PyeongChang Winter Olympics (p.2)
Korea to lodge
complaint with WTO on Trump¡¯s protectionism on washing machines etc (p.2)
The government driven
minimum wage for this year raised 16.4% to KW7,530 per hour (p.4)
Incheon Airport
officially opened its second terminal on 18th (p.5)
2,943 athletes from
92 countries registered to compete in Olympics (p.6)
SKorea¡¯s military
will reduce its number of troops to half a million by 2022 (p.8)
Rise in KWon,
interest rates and oil prices are casting shadow on Korean economy (p.9)
SKorea's economy
expanded 3.1% in 2017 on the back of robust exports (p.10)
SKorea's trade
surplus came to $3.7 bil in Jan for 72 straight months (p.10)
SKorea began a
real-name trading system for cryptocurrencies on 30th (p.11)
Korean electronics
industry recorded $121.7 bil in production volume in 2017 (p.12)
Performance of chaebols
in fourth quarter (p.13)
Samsung ranked fifth
on the list of world's most innovative companies in 2018 (p.14)
SEC decided on its first-ever stock split of the face value of its stocks
to 50:1 (p.14)
HMC and Kia Motors
posted record-high 995,383 units of newly registered vehicles in Europe (p.16)
HMC unveiled a
next-generation hydrogen-powered sport utility vehicle, Nexo (p.16)
KOSPI kept on renewing its historical high, to hit
2,598 on 29th (p.17)
KWon against USDollar strengthened to 1,058 on 25th (p.18)
Korean shipbuilders
set positive target for 2018 (p.18)
Korean authorities
are to implement a new softened guideline for issuing RG (p.19)
HHI has bagged a good
volume of orders in Jan (p.22)
HMM has sued the head
of its former mother company Hyundai Group (p.23)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ATTACHMENT: Korea Report - January 2018 (PDF FILE)
Please let us know if you have difficulty opening the file.