Tag Archives: SKoreas

S.Korea’s Yoon pardons Samsung’s Jay Y. Lee to counter ‘economic crisis’

  • Samsung heir served 18 months in jail for bribery
  • Businessmen were convicted in scandal that felled a president
  • S.Korea says leaders needed to help overcome economic crisis
  • Samsung may increase investment with Lee pardoned – analysts

SEOUL, Aug 12 (Reuters) – South Korea’s President Yoon Suk-yeol pardoned Samsung Electronics (005930.KS) Vice Chairman Jay Y. Lee on Friday, with the justice ministry saying the business leader was needed to help overcome a “national economic crisis”.

The pardon is largely symbolic, with Lee already out on parole after serving 18 months in jail for bribery in a scandal that led to massive protests and brought down then-President Park Geun-hye in 2017.

However, analysts said the pardon should mean Lee will be able to carry out business activities with fewer legal restrictions, and could herald some large investments from Samsung, the world’s biggest smartphone and memory-chip maker.

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“With urgent needs to overcome the national economic crisis, we carefully selected economic leaders who lead the national growth engine through active technology investment and job creation to be pardoned,” Justice Minister Han Dong Hoon told a briefing.

Tech- and export-dependent South Korea, Asia’s fourth-largest economy is grappling with soaring inflation, weakening demand, poor sentiment and slowing spending. read more

Lee, an heir of Samsung’s founding family, welcomed the decision and vowed to work hard for the national economy “with continuous investment and job creation.”

Also pardoned by the pro-business Yoon was Lotte Group chairman Shin Dong-bin, who was sentenced to a two-and-a-half-year prison sentence on charges of bribery, also related to Park.

In a statement, Lotte said Shin would also help in “overcoming the complex global crisis.”

POLITICAL CRIMES

Park herself was pardoned late last year by her successor, liberal president Moon Jae-in, who struggled to follow through on campaign vows to clean up business and politics.

A survey conducted last month jointly by four pollsters showed that 77% of respondents favored pardoning the Samsung leader, despite the earlier protests.

“(That support) is apparently due to the current economic situation, but people also seem to have thought in part that Lee was somewhat in a position where he could not shrug off pressure from the former administration,” said Eom Kyeong-young, a political commentator based in Seoul.

While business groups including the Korea Chamber of Commerce & Industry and Korea Enterprises Federation welcomed the pardon for Lee, civil rights groups criticized Yoon’s pardons for businessmen.

“The Yoon Suk-yeol administration… is ultimately just aiming for a country only for the rich,” People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy said in a statement.

Another jailed former president, Lee Myung-bak, had been expected to be pardoned after Yoon raised the possibility in June, but was ultimately not on the list. He was arrested in 2018 and sentenced to 17 years in prison for corruption, embezzlement and bribery.

BACK IN BUSINESS

Analysts have long expected decisions on major projects and investments once Lee was reinstated, with company sources saying such decisions should only be made by Lee.

“This removes the employment restriction Lee was technically under,” said Park Ju-gun, head of research firm Leaders Index.

“And projects that were being pursued by Samsung, such as major M&A or investments, these could be tied to the pardon.”

Even before receiving the presidential pardon, Lee had returned to the limelight, appearing in May with President Yoon and U.S. President Joe Biden when they visited Samsung’s Pyeongtaek chip production facilities.

He has also visited Europe in June to meet ASML Holding NV (ASML.AS) CEO Peter Wennink, discussing the adoption of key high-end chip equipment. read more

Last November, Samsung decided on Taylor, Texas as the site of a new $17 billion chip plant. read more

Top Samsung executives have hinted earlier this year at potential upcoming acquisition activity. Samsung Electronics has not conducted a high-profile deal since it completed its purchase of audio electronics maker Harman for $8 billion in 2017.

Although macroeconomic factors such as a demand downturn may weigh on investment decisions, Samsung has a huge war chest.

Samsung Electronics’ cash balance increased slightly to 125 trillion won ($95.13 billion) as of end-June, from 111 trillion a year earlier.

While experts say Lee could now more freely participate in management, his legal woes persist due to an ongoing trial where he faces the risk of returning to jail if found guilty of charges of fraud and stock manipulation.

Shares in Samsung Electronics closed up 0.5% versus benchmark KOSPI’s (.KS11) 0.2% rise. Lotte Corp (004990.KS) shares were down 0.6%.

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Reporting by Joyce Lee, Soo-hyang Choi, Heekyong Yang; Editing by Lincoln Feast

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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S.Korea’s Moon pardons disgraced ex-president Park amid tight presidential race

South Korean ousted leader Park Geun-hye arrives at a court in Seoul, South Korea, August 25, 2017. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo

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SEOUL, Dec 24 (Reuters) – South Korea’s President Moon Jae-in granted a pardon to former President Park Geun-hye, who was in prison after being convicted of corruption, the justice ministry said on Friday, amid a tight presidential race.

Park, 69, became South Korea’s first democratically elected leader to be thrown out of office when the Constitutional Court upheld a parliament vote in 2017 to impeach her over a scandal that also landed the heads of two conglomerates, including Samsung, in jail.

She was brought down after being found guilty of colluding with a friend to receive tens of billions of won from major conglomerates mostly to fund her friend’s family and nonprofit foundations.

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In January, South Korea’s top court upheld a 20-year prison sentence for Park on the graft charges that finalised her downfall, bringing an end to the legal process.

Moon’s office said the decision to pardon Park was intended to “overcome unfortunate past history, promote people’s unity and join hands for the future.”

“I hope this would provide a chance to go beyond differences in thoughts and pros and cons, and open a new era of integration and unity,” his spokeswoman quoted him as saying.

Moon had previously pledged not to pardon those who were convicted of corruption. But many supporters and politicians of the conservative main opposition People Power party have called for Park’s pardon ahead of the March presidential election, citing her deteriorating health and deepening political strife.

Opposition lawmakers have said that Park has experienced health problems while in prison, including undergoing shoulder surgery.

Park’s imprisonment had become a political hot potato that divided the country, with conservatives having weekly rallies in downtown Seoul urging her release and criticising Moon until the COVID-19 pandemic emerged.

A poll by Gallup Korea in November showed 48% of respondents were opposed to pardoning Park and Lee, but the numbers have dropped from around 60% early this year.

The flag bearer of Moon’s ruling Democratic Party, Lee Jae-myung, and People Power’s candidate Yoon Suk-yeol are seen neck and neck in recent polls.

Lee said he understood Moon’s “agony” and respected his decision for national unity, but Park should offer a sincere apology for the scandal.

Yoon said Park’s pardon was welcome albeit late, but did not elaborate on reporters’ questions over whether her potential resumption of political activity.

Park’s predecessor, also conservative Lee Myung-bak, who is also imprisoned on corruption charges, was not pardoned.

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Reporting by Josh Smith and Hyonhee Shin
Editing by Matthew Lewis, Gerry Doyle and Michael Perry

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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A little known cult is S.Korea’s latest COVID-19 outbreak

SEOUL, Nov 24 (Reuters) – A little known sect led by a pastor who pokes eyes to heal is at the centre of a COVID-19 outbreak in South Korea, as the country reported a new daily record of 4,116 cases and battles a spike in serious cases straining hospitals.

In a tiny rural church in a town of 427 residents in Cheonan city, south of Seoul, at least 241 people linked to the religious community had tested positive for coronavirus, a city official told Reuters on Wednesday.

“We believe the scale of the outbreak is large…,” the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) said in a statement.

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About 90% of the religious community was unvaccinated and the majority were in close contact through communal living.

Many of the congregation were elderly in their 60s and above and were unvaccinated, the city official said. Just 17 out of the 241 confirmed cases had been vaccinated.

“I believe it’s the church’s anti-government beliefs that refrained the believers to get the vaccine,” the official said, adding that the town was put under a lockdown.

However, the KDCA said it was not possible to determine precisely why such a large number were unvaccinated, as the elderly and people with underlying conditions were not banned from inoculation.

The church opened in the early 1990s and has ever since become larger with communal living facilities of its own.

The religion is not officially registered as a sect, however the ritual act the pastor performs is known as the so called “imposition of hands on eyes”, a practice of poking two eyes to rid of secular desire, Jung youn-seok, a head of cult information resources think tank told Reuters.

“Such act is extremely dangerous and nonbiblical. It is an outright ban in Korean Christianity,” Jung said, adding that the pastor’s mother was a powerful figure and was ousted from Christian community in the 1990s for practicing identical rituals.

Calls to the church from Reuters went unanswered.

The outbreak is a small portion of the national total, but is an example of a cluster with a high concentration of cases.

Shincheonji was a church at the centre of the first major coronavirus epidemic outside China early 2020, with at least 5,227 people linked to its 310,000 followers infected after attending a service in the city of Daegu.

EMERGENCY PLAN IMMINENT

South Korea this month switched to a “living with COVID-19” plan aimed at lifting rigid distancing rules and ultimately reopening after reaching vaccination goals last month.

Since then there has been a sharp rise in cases with a fresh daily record of infections on Tuesday.

Looking at the metropolitan Seoul area alone, the situation is critical enough to impose an emergency plan at any time, Prime Minister Kim Boo-kyum told a COVID-19 response meeting on Wednesday.

He called on health authorities to classify the patients accordingly based on the severity of the symptoms and make use of self-treatment options for mild or asymptomatic cases.

Less than 20% were treating themselves at home last week, Kim said.

The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) had said the emergency plan may be imposed if and when the nationwide ICU bed capacity surpasses 75% or depending on the risk assessment that reviews medical response shortfalls, surge in number of elderly patients and uptake in booster shots.

Hospitals were treating 586 severe COVID-19 patients as of Tuesday midnight, rapidly filling up limited hospital beds for serious and critical cases. More than 85% of them were aged 60 or above, KDCA data showed.

71% of the ICU beds were filled up nationwide and 83.7% in capital Seoul and neighbouring areas alone, Son Young-rae, a senior health ministry official, told a briefing, stressing ministry efforts to secure more beds with administrative order.

Hundreds were still awaiting for their beds.

Despite the increase in hospitalisation rate, the country’s mortality rate remains relatively low at 0.79%.

South Korea was one of the first countries to record novel coronavirus cases after it emerged in China in late 2019. It has since had 425,065 infections, with 3,363 deaths.

The country has fully vaccinated 79.1% of its 52 million people, while just 4.1% have been given a booster dose.

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Reporting by Sangmi Cha; Editing by Michael Perry

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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S.Korea’s Krafton, maker of hit game ‘PUBG’, tumbles on debut

Players are pictured as they attend the PUBG Global Invitational 2018, the first official esports tournament for the computer game PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds in Berlin, Germany, July 26, 2018. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch/File Photo

  • Shares fall as much as 20% below IPO price
  • Worries about China crackdown on gaming sector
  • Worst debut for S.Korean listing since 2004

SEOUL/HONG KONG, Aug 10 (Reuters) – Shares in Krafton Inc (259960.KS), the Tencent Holdings-backed (0700.HK) South Korean company behind blockbuster video game “PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds” (PUBG), fell as much as 20% on their trading debut on Tuesday.

Analysts attributed the share tumble of South Korea’s second-largest IPO to an expensive valuation and China regulation risks, with gaming companies facing uncertain prospects after China regulators have come down hard on a number of industries, upending norms with new guidance and rules.

Krafton shares opened down 9.9% from their IPO price of 498,000 won, making it South Korea’s lowest trading debut since LG Philips LCD, now LG Display, first went public in 2004, according to data from Refinitiv Eikon.

The stock closed down 8.8% from the IPO price, valuing the company at about $19.32 billion.

“This was a classic case of the owners being a bit too greedy in their valuation assessment of the company. Although the IPO price range was lowered, it was not lowered enough,” said Douglas Kim, an independent analyst, who publishes on Smartkarma.

Krafton derived 87% of its revenue from Asia excluding South Korea in the January-March quarter, a large portion of which is estimated by analysts to come from sales in China handled by Tencent.

Krafton earns fees by providing technology services for “Peacekeeper Elite”, a game similar to “PUBG Mobile” that Tencent distributes and is usually among China’s top two grossing games, it said in an IPO filing.

“About 70% (of sales) appear to be from Tencent,” LightStream Research analyst Mio Kato, who publishes on Smartkarma, told Reuters.

“China has already made noises about (Tencent’s) ‘Honor of Kings’ … If they also request changes for ‘Peacekeeper Elite’ that would be a negative and could be a very large negative.”

Shares in Tencent and global gaming companies with China exposure such as Activision Blizzard (ATVI.O) tumbled last week after the Economic Information Daily, which is affiliated with the official Xinhua Agency, called online gaming “spiritual opium”. read more

Tencent quickly said it would further curb minors’ access to its flagship video game “Honor of Kings”.

Still, Krafton raised $3.75 billion in South Korea’s second-largest IPO after Samsung Life Insurance’s (032830.KS) float in 2010, even after the firm cut its fund-raising target by a quarter after regulators ordered it to revise its filings.

Based on market capitalisation, Krafton was benchmark KOSPI’s (.KS11) 19th biggest stock on Tuesday, excluding preferred shares.

Some 65% of the IPO proceeds will go to Krafton, which plans to use the bulk of the funds to acquire other gaming companies. The remainder went to shareholders cashing out their investments.

More large offerings are in the pipeline in what is shaping up to be a bumper year for South Korean stock market floats, including EV battery maker LG Energy Solution and payments firm Kakao Pay, which is backed by China’s Ant Financial.

($1 = 1,148.9900 won)

Reporting by Joyce Lee and Scott Murdoch; Additional reporting by Gaurav Dogra and Jihoon Lee; Editing by Edwina Gibbs, Richard Pullin and Ana Nicolaci da Costa

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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