South Korea

Intelligence for Better Decision Making

Shifting Dynamics in South Korea’s Semiconductor Industry Amid Global Competition
Jan. 8, 2026 | Competitiveness

South Korea’s semiconductor industry demonstrates robust global leadership alongside evolving challenges, supported by strategic domestic and international policies.

**South Korea’s semiconductor sector relies on SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics, which together control 80 percent of the global high-bandwidth memory market.**
This hardware dominance supports a domestic full-stack AI environment built on advanced 5G networks, proprietary models such as Naver’s HyperCLOVA X, and extensive data streams from super apps like Kakao and Naver. The country also leads the world in industrial robot density, strengthening its capabilities in physical AI applications.

**However, the ecosystem faces internal challenges including a shrinking AI talent pool as skilled professionals migrate to US tech firms, leaving South Korea last among OECD countries in net AI talent inflow.**
Companies rely heavily on American AI platforms and foreign capital for data infrastructure, while stringent data regulations restrict training. Occasional power shortages also threaten operational stability in semiconductor fabs.

**Micron Technology is expanding its next-generation HBM4 capacity to 15,000 wafers per month by 2026—roughly 30 percent of its planned 55,000-wafer total—to meet demand from NVIDIA’s “Vera Rubin” AI accelerator.**
The company has already begun equipment investments, plans to boost output in the second quarter, and will launch HBM4 mass production in February. Micron, Samsung, and SK Hynix will coordinate supplies according to NVIDIA’s performance evaluations in the first half of the year. By year-end, an advanced packaging plant in Singapore and, in the second half of 2027, Micron’s Hiromisa plant in Japan will add further capacity.

**China’s semiconductor industry has closed the gap with South Korea, surpassing it in system chip design, infrastructure, and a network of over 3,500 fabless companies versus South Korea’s roughly 150.**
The Korea Institute for Industrial Economics and Trade reports that China outperforms South Korea in 19 out of 30 semiconductor-industry criteria—ranging from R&D to pricing and finished-product services—despite US sanctions. Huawei and Cambricon now produce advanced AI chips domestically, and China pursues leadership across robotics, electric vehicles, batteries, and self-driving cars under its “China Standards 2035” initiative, including the first national standard for EV solid-state batteries.

**The government and ruling party have designated semiconductors as a core growth engine in their 2026 economic strategy, advancing the Special Act on Strengthening and Supporting the Competitiveness of the Semiconductor Industry toward final approval.**
The act aims to position South Korea among the world’s top two semiconductor powers. The economic plan also targets growth in defense, biotechnology, and cultural exports, restructures petrochemicals and steel, advances AX and GX transitions, and promotes regional development through RE100 industrial complexes and gift certificate programs. Financial measures include macroeconomic interventions, long-term domestic stock investment via the National Growth Fund, and tax incentives to channel liquidity into high-growth and venture capital funds.
Autonomous Driving and Robotics Breakthroughs Unveiled at CES 2026
Jan. 8, 2026 | Technology & Innovation

Leading automotive and technology firms revealed groundbreaking robotic and autonomous driving innovations at CES 2026 in Las Vegas.

**On January 6, Chung Eui-sun, Chairman of Hyundai Motor Group, attended CES 2026 to explore cooperation opportunities with major technology companies.**
His visit, following an economic delegation tied to President Yoon Suk-yeol’s state visit to China, represents Hyundai’s effort to strengthen ties with leading tech firms and accelerate progress in robotics and autonomous driving.

**At Hyundai’s booth, Chung reviewed demonstrations of its next-generation robot platform Mobed, the humanoid robot Atlas, and the Ioniq 5 robotaxi.**
He met with executives from Boston Dynamics and Google DeepMind Robotics to discuss technology roadmaps and integration challenges. This initiative reflects Hyundai’s strategy to integrate advanced robotics into its future mobility solutions.

**Chung explored Qualcomm’s high-performance Dragonwing IQ10 processor, signaling Hyundai’s interest in diversifying its chip partnerships beyond NVIDIA and Google.**
He also tested LG Electronics’ AI cockpit and autonomous driving systems for potential use in Hyundai vehicles. At Samsung Electronics, he proposed joint robotics initiatives to President No Tae-moon.

**He concluded the day with NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang, reaffirming an October agreement for Hyundai to acquire 50,000 Blackwell AI chips.**
Both leaders pledged to fast-track the development and deployment of Hyundai’s proprietary AI models, leveraging this AI infrastructure to enhance in-vehicle intelligence and autonomous capabilities.

**Meanwhile, NVIDIA launched Alpamayo, its first AI system specifically for self-driving cars.**
After the launch, Jensen Huang discussed the new platform with Mercedes-Benz Chairman Ola Källenius and Executive Chair Euisun Chung. Industry speculation suggests Hyundai may adopt Alpamayo to advance its autonomous driving efforts, as it currently trails competitors like Tesla in Level 2+ technology and aims to introduce similar systems in mass-market vehicles by the end of 2027.

**Mercedes-Benz became the first automaker to adopt Alpamayo, incorporating the AI-powered system in the upcoming CLA model debuting in the US in Q1 2026 before a broader rollout.**
Alpamayo’s open-source framework combines vision-language-action models for interpreting visual data, large reasoning modules for complex scenarios, simulation tools for rare or hazardous events, and open datasets for extensive training and validation.

**Addressing concerns about memory supply, Huang emphasized NVIDIA’s role as a leading user of HBM4 high-bandwidth memory technology and cited strong support from Samsung Electronics and SK hynix.**
He said NVIDIA’s demand will drive expanded production capacity, minimizing the risk of shortages and ensuring a steady supply for AI chip development.

Monitored Intelligence for South Korea - Jan. 9, 2026


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Trade minister vows efforts to achieve US$700 bln in exports again in 2026

Yonhap | English | News | Jan. 9, 2026 | UndeterminedTrade Issues and Numbers

Trade Minister Yeo Han-koo pledged to maintain South Korea's annual exports above the US$700 billion mark for 2026, building on the record achievement of 2025. Last year, South Korea's exports reached an all-time high of $709.7 billion, driven by strong performances in semiconductors, automobiles, ships, and smaller sectors like agro-fisheries and cosmetics.

Yeo credited this success to renewed trust in the Korean market following President Lee Jae Myung’s administration and the bilateral trade agreement between Seoul and Washington. The government plans to diversify export items and markets to counteract protectionist policies from major economies, including the EU's heightened steel safeguards. Efforts will also focus on enhancing infrastructure and financial support for export firms.

'홈플러스 사태' 김병주…검찰, 구속영장 청구

Kim Byung-joo in the Homeplus Incident… Prosecution Requests Arrest Warrant

Hankyung | Local Language | News | Jan. 9, 2026 | Political Scandal or Corruption

Prosecutors investigating the "Homeplus incident" filed an arrest warrant request for MBK Partners Chairman Kim Byung-joo on January 7, nearly eight months after receiving the case from financial authorities. The Seoul Central District Prosecutors' Office also requested arrest warrants for four other individuals, including Homeplus CEO Kim Kwang-il and other MBK executives, citing charges of fraud and violations of the Capital Markets Act. Prosecutors cited the risk of evidence destruction and potential flight due to frequent overseas travel by the suspects.

The charges stem from allegations that MBK and Homeplus issued large-scale bonds despite anticipating a credit rating downgrade, then abruptly filed for corporate rehabilitation, causing losses to bond investors. Homeplus issued 82 billion won in electronic short-term bonds on February 25, 2026, but its credit rating dropped three days later, followed by a rehabilitation filing on March 4. Subsequent downgrades led to severe financial distress, including the suspension of operations at 10 Homeplus stores nationwide.

Prosecutors uncovered evidence that MBK executives were informed of Homeplus's operating losses and impending credit rating downgrade well before the rehabilitation filing. The investigation was fast-tracked from the Financial Supervisory Service in April 2025, with multiple search-and-seizure operations conducted at Homeplus, MBK headquarters, and Chairman Kim's residence. Chairman Kim has been under a travel ban during the investigation.

Following summons investigations of key executives completed in December 2025, prosecutors moved to request arrest warrants. MBK Partners responded by denying all charges, asserting that the prosecution misunderstood the intent and actions of the major shareholder in trying to revive Homeplus during its financial difficulties, and pledged to present a full defense in court.

“마통 5조원 긁어 어디 썼길래”…정부, 아직 국방비도 지급 안했다

Where Did the Government Spend 5 Trillion Won in Overdrafts? They Haven't Even Paid the Defense Budget Yet

Maekyung | Local Language | News | Jan. 9, 2026 | Political Scandal or Corruption

In December 2025, the South Korean government borrowed 5 trillion won from the Bank of Korea due to a temporary cash shortage, following a similar borrowing of 14 trillion won in September 2025. These loans are part of a temporary loan system where the government borrows short-term funds to cover timing gaps between revenues and expenditures, akin to an overdraft account at a commercial bank.

In total, the government borrowed a cumulative 164.5 trillion won from the Bank of Korea in 2025, the second-largest amount on record after 2024’s 173 trillion won. This figure notably exceeds borrowings from 2021 through 2023 combined. The government paid interest on these loans totaling 158.09 billion won in 2025, also the second-highest record after 2024.

Despite these emergency funds, the government reportedly failed to make timely payments of approximately 1.3 trillion won in defense funds to military services and contractors by the end of last year. The Ministry of Economy and Finance committed to executing these delayed expenditures promptly within the first week of January 2026.

Criticism was leveled at the Lee Jae-myung administration for heavy reliance on Bank of Korea overdrafts while simultaneously failing to pay urgent defense budget items on time. Lawmaker Park Seong-hoon condemned this as a significant treasury management failure, particularly given the administration's earlier opposition to temporary borrowing practices when out of power.

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