South Korean Finance Minister Promotes 'Korea Premium' to British Investors
Quick Look
- South Korean Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol pitched the 'Korea premium' to British investors, highlighting solid economic fundamentals and AI capabilities.
- He noted reforms and market growth, aiming to attract foreign investment.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
South Korean Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol met with global investors in Britain to promote the 'Korea premium,' a concept suggesting South Korean stocks are undervalued. The meeting aimed to attract foreign investment amid growing interest in the South Korean capital market.
By Kang Yoon-seung
SEOUL, May 19 (Yonhap) -- Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol highlighted South Korea's solid economic fundamentals and strong artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities to investors in Britain, promoting what he called the "Korea premium," his office said Tuesday.
Koo made the remarks during a meeting with global investors in Britain on Monday (London time), attended by around 20 senior officials from 17 leading financial companies, including BlackRock Inc., J.P. Morgan Asset Management and BNP Paribas, according to the Ministry of Finance and Economy.
The event was organized to engage with key global investors amid growing interest in the South Korean capital market, the finance ministry said.
"The so-called Korea discount has become a term of the past, and the Korea premium has become a new reality. Now is the golden time to invest in South Korea," Koo said during the session.
The Korea discount is a term used to describe the tendency for South Korean stocks to trade at lower valuations than their global peers due to financial regulations and other barriers that hinder foreign investment.
Koo said South Korea has been introducing investor-friendly tax reforms and is pushing to overhaul the financial market.
On the back of such efforts, the finance minister said the Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) has surged more than 170 percent since the launch of the new administration in June last year, making South Korea's stock market the world's seventh largest.
South Korea had attracted additional funds worth US$10.9 billion as of Friday following the country's inclusion in the World Government Bond Index in April, he added.
South Korea is taking a leading role in the high bandwidth memory, secondary battery and sensor sectors essential to the physical AI industry, and its outstanding infrastructure makes Asia's fourth-largest economy an attractive investment destination, Koo stressed.
Looking ahead, the finance minister told investors that South Korea is working to further lower barriers for foreign investors, including through the launch of a 24-hour foreign exchange market.
In response to growing concerns over supply disruptions caused by the Middle East crisis, Koo said South Korea is reviewing proactive measures to strengthen its supply chains, including expanding domestic production capacity and diversifying import sources.
Open Questions
- What specific proactive measures are being considered to strengthen supply chains?
- What are the details of the planned 24-hour foreign exchange market launch?
- How will the investor-friendly tax reforms specifically benefit foreign investors?






