Korea-US Week in Review

Korea-US Week in Review

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Top story: Korea’s chaebol went all-in on domestic AI, mobility and defense, a 312 trillion won ($204B) wave of investment landed on top of a settled 15% tariff regime, while Hyundai posted its best-ever June in the US.

The week’s throughline: Korean top groups are building at home and on American soil at the same time.

Chips & AI, Korea doubles down at home

President Lee opened the week unveiling a $576 billion semiconductor and AI investment drive, anchored by Samsung and SK Hynix’s combined ~800 trillion won for new southwest fabs.

Midweek, SK Hynix moved to list an ADR on Nasdaq (SKHY) around July 10, raising up to ~$29B to fund chip infrastructure tied to US demand, the clearest signal yet of Korea buying US capital access. An ADR represents shares of a foreign company and allows international stocks to be easily bought and traded on U.S. exchanges like the NYSE or Nasdaq.

Trade & tariffs

The 15% reciprocal rate held all week, with Seoul citing US reassurance it will go no higher.

Battery makers (LG Energy Solution, Samsung SDI, SK On) are pursuing tariff refunds after February’s Supreme Court ruling, while Hyundai is staying cautious on refund claims to avoid friction with the Trump administration.

We are watching the Section 122 10% tariff, set to lapse around July 24.

Autos, Hyundai’s record run

Hyundai posted its best-ever June in the US (77,555 units, +11% YoY), capping record Q2 and first-half results and putting it on pace for a fourth straight annual US sales record.

Kia also set a June record.

The run is hybrid- and crossover-led, winning share on product mix, not price.

Hyundai’s bet in future mobility

Capping the week, Hyundai and Hanwha unveiled a combined 97 trillion won investment for southeastern Korea, part of a 312 trillion won conglomerate wave announced Friday in Jinju.

Hyundai committed 42 trillion won over 10 years to turn the Gyeongsang region into a hub for AI-defined vehicles, advanced manufacturing, aerospace and clean energy, centered on a new Ulsan EV plant, Level 4+ autonomy, Mobis/Wia EV-component lines, advanced air mobility (Supernal), lunar rovers, SMRs and hydrogen.

As a friend shared, “I believe the next wave of space hardware will be landers but right after that will be ground vehicles.”

That said, Hanwha added 55 trillion won for integrated AI space infrastructure.

The BCW Take

This was the week Korea’s strategy came fully into view: with the 15% tariff floor now a planning constant, the action is positioning.

Korea’s chaebol are pouring capital into home-soil AI, chips, mobility and defense while simultaneously planting flags on American ground, SK Hynix’s Nasdaq listing and Hanwha’s Philadelphia yard on one side, and the 312 trillion won domestic build-out on the other.

For clients with Korea exposure, this is the moment to lock US-side capacity and supply-chain footing while Korean balance sheets stay aggressive.

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