Thursday, November 5, 2020

Round-up of important news from major Korean dailies and from international media today

The Korea Post (http://www.koreapost.com/)
Shinhan Vietnam Bank concludes business tie-up with VKBIA in Vietnam
Shinhan Vietnam Bank, the Vietnamese subsidiary of Shinhan Bank, has signed a business agreement with Vietnam-Korea Business and Investment Association (VKBIA), a major Vietnamese economic cooperation organization, in Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam to strengthen business cooperation between Korea and Vietnam.
VKBIA is a Korean and Vietnamese entrepreneurs and investment association that has supported activities for exchanges and cooperation between Korea and Vietnam in various fields, including economy, trade, science and technology, culture and education, since its establishment in 2019.
Through this pact, Shinhan Vietnam Bank plans to cooperate with VKBIA in various areas, including comprehensive cooperation with VKBIA member companies, provision of advanced financial services, and holding seminars to promote exchanges between Korea and Vietnam.

Hyosung T&C to invest $53 million for expansion of spandex plant in Turkey
Hyosung T&C will invest 60 billion won ($53 million) in the Cerkezkoy area near Istanbul, Turkey, and expand its spandex production plant with an annual capacity of 15,000 tons by July next year, the company said on Nov. 2.
When the expansion is completed, the production capacity of the spandex plant in Turkey will be expanded to about 40,000 tons.
The expansion is based on Chairman Cho Hyun-joon's judgment that the company needs to make a preemptive investment as the global clothing market is recovering in earnest, especially in the European market.

POSCO Chairman Choi says, ‘Steel will be the best material to improve human life’
"In the future, steel will be the most important material that will improve the quality of human life," POSCO Chairman Choi Jeong-woo said in a keynote speech on the theme of POST-COVID-19 Megatrends: A New Decade (Post Corona Mega Trend and Steel Industry: New Decade) at the WSD "Steel Success Strategies" online conference on Oct. 27.
Chairman Choi defined future steel industry megatrends as "new mobility," "urbanization," "digitalization," "De-carbonization," and "De-globalization."
The World Steel Dynamics (WSD) is a global steel analysis organization based in New Jersey, the U.S., and holds the Steel Success Strategies Conference every year, and conducts and announces competitive evaluations on major global steel companies.

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KBS (http://world.kbs.co.kr/english/news/)
Biden Says "Will Emerge Victorious"
U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden predicted victory for himself on Wednesday, but stopped short of making an official declaration.
Biden said at a Delaware convention hall that he is winning in enough states to reach 270 electoral votes.
"My friends, I'm confident, will emerge victorious. But this will not be my victory alone or our victory alone be a victory for the American people, for our democracy, for America. And there will be no blue states and red states when we win, just the United States of America."

S. Korea Sees Triple-Digit New COVID-19 Infections for 2nd-Straight Day
Daily new COVID-19 infections in South Korea stood in the triple digits for the second straight day as outbreaks linked to medical facilities and social gatherings continued.
The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency(KDCA) reported 125 new cases as of 12 a.m. Thursday, raising the country's accumulated total to 27-thousand-50.
Of the new cases, 108 were local infections while 17 were imported.

S. Korea's Current Account Surplus in September Hit 2-Year High
South Korea's current account surplus hit a two-year high in September on the back of a rebound in exports despite the COVID-19 pandemic. 
According to the Bank of Korea on Thursday, the country's current account surplus reached ten-point-21 billion U.S. dollars in September.
The current account has been in the black for five straight months since the country logged a deficit in April.

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Yonhap (http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr)
Biden maintains slight lead over Trump in three battleground states with vote counting under way
U.S. President Donald Trump and his Democratic rival, Joe Biden, were locked in a surprisingly close race a day after the presidential election as Biden came from behind Wednesday to hold razor-thin leads in several battleground states.
As of 3 p.m., Biden was projected to have secured at least 237 electoral votes against Trump's 213, while the former vice president was also leading in three of the six key battleground states that were all won by Trump in 2016 -- Arizona, Michigan and Wisconsin.
The three states, if won by Biden, are expected to put his electoral college votes right at the 270 necessary to win the White House, given that Biden also maintains his currently slim lead in Nevada, according to U.S. cable news network CNN.

New virus cases above 100 for 2nd day, cluster infections biggest hurdle in virus fight
South Korea's new coronavirus infections rose by triple digits for a second consecutive day Thursday, as sporadic infections continued in the greater Seoul area.
The country added 125 more COVID-19 cases, including 108 local infections, raising the total caseload to 27,050, according to the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA).
The number of domestically transmitted people rose to the highest level since Oct. 23, when 138 new cases were reported.

N.K. adopts anti-smoking law at rare meeting of Supreme People's Assembly
North Korea has held a rare meeting of the Supreme People's Assembly to adopt an anti-smoking law, state media reported Thursday, amid questions whether leader Kim Jong-un, known as a heavy smoker, would kick the habit.
The plenary meeting of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly (SPA), held Wednesday, adopted the Tobacco-Prohibition Law and Revising and Supplementing the Law on Enterprises, the official Korean Central News Agency reported.
he tobacco-prohibition law "stipulates the rules which all the institutions, organizations and citizens must follow in protecting the lives and health of the people and providing more cultured and hygienic living environments by tightening the legal and social controls on the production and sale of cigarettes and on smoking as required by the state tobacco-prohibition policy," the KCNA said.

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The Korea Herald (http://www.koreaherald.com)
Biden wins Michigan, Wisconsin, now on brink of White House
Joe Biden won the battleground prizes of Michigan and Wisconsin on Wednesday, reclaiming a key part of the "blue wall" that slipped away from Democrats four years ago and dramatically narrowing President Donald Trump's pathway to reelection.
A full day after Election Day, neither candidate had cleared the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the White House. But Biden's victories in the Great Lakes states left him at 264, meaning he was one battleground state away from crossing the threshold and becoming president-elect.
Biden, who has received more than 71 million votes, the most in history, was joined by his running mate Kamala Harris at an afternoon news conference and said he now expected to win the presidency, though he stopped short of outright declaring victory.

New virus cases above 100 for 2nd day, cluster infections biggest hurdle in virus fight
South Korea's new coronavirus infections rose by triple digits for a second consecutive day Thursday, as sporadic infections continued in the greater Seoul area.
The country added 125 more COVID-19 cases, including 108 local infections, raising the total caseload to 27,050, according to the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA).
The number of domestically transmitted people rose to the highest level since Oct. 23, when 138 new cases were reported.

NK adopts anti-smoking law at rare meeting of Supreme People's Assembly
North Korea has held a rare meeting of the Supreme People's Assembly to adopt an anti-smoking law, state media reported Thursday, amid questions whether leader Kim Jong-un, known as a heavy smoker, would kick the habit.
The plenary meeting of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly (SPA), held Wednesday, adopted the Tobacco-Prohibition Law and Revising and Supplementing the Law on Enterprises, the official Korean Central News Agency reported.
The tobacco-prohibition law "stipulates the rules which all the institutions, organizations and citizens must follow in protecting the lives and health of the people and providing more cultured and hygienic living environments by tightening the legal and social controls on the production and sale of cigarettes and on smoking as required by the state tobacco-prohibition policy," the KCNA said.

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The Korea Times (http://www.koreatimes.co.kr)
Biden says he believes 'we will be the winners' of US election
Democrat Joe Biden said Wednesday he was confident of winning the presidency once all votes are counted, saying he was leading Donald Trump in the remaining swing states that will determine the election's outcome.
With results from Tuesday's election showing Biden steadily nearing the threshold necessary to win the White House, Trump has mounted legal challenges in efforts to suspend the counting of ballots or force recounts in battlegrounds that will determine the next president.
"After a long night of counting, it's clear that we're winning enough states to reach 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency," Biden said in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware.

Republicans on track to dash Democratic hopes of US Senate majority
Republicans appeared poised to retain control of the U.S. Senate on Wednesday, after Senator Susan Collins defied political odds to win re-election in Maine and other Republican incumbents led Democrats in a handful of undecided races.
Democrats, who had been favored to win the Senate majority heading into Tuesday's election, had a net gain of only one seat to show by Wednesday afternoon as their options for further increases dwindled, despite a huge Democratic money advantage going into the final weeks of the campaign.
Republicans currently hold a 53-47 seat Senate majority. To win control, Democrats would need to net three Republican-held seats if Democrat Joe Biden wins the White House and Senator Kamala Harris becomes vice president with the tie-breaking Senate vote. If Biden loses to Republican President Donald Trump, Democrats would need four seats.

South Korea stays on toes about US election
The U.S. presidential election remained still too early to call as of 5 p.m., Wednesday, keeping South Korea on its toes due to the rival candidates' sharply different views on foreign policy linked to its Asian ally.
Diplomatic experts believe that President Donald Trump spending four more years in office may seek to further force South Korea into following his "America First" policy, while a Joe Biden administration would mean returning to traditional alliance management.
The Trump administration has been under fire for straining Washington's relationship with its allies, including South Korea, over the past four years, as evidenced by his demand for a hefty hike in Seoul's contribution to the stationing of the U.S. Forces Korea, and pressure on the country to jump on the anti-China bandwagon despite Seoul's economic ties with Beijing.

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HanKyoReh Shinmun (http://english.hani.co.kr)
S. Korean NIS director may visit Japan next week, Japanese broadcaster reports
National Intelligence Service (NIS) Director Park Jie-won is allegedly finalizing plans to visit Japan and meet with high-ranking government officials there next week, Japanese private broadcaster TBS reported on Nov. 3. This would be the first time a senior official in the South Korean government has visited Japan since Yoshihide Suga became prime minister.
While in Japan, Park is likely to discuss the issue of Koreans conscripted for labor during the Japanese colonial occupation. Forced labor is one of the key issues weighing down relations between the two countries.
Japanese government officials quoted by the broadcaster said that Park, known for his extensive knowledge of Japan, is likely to sit down with figures including Director of Cabinet Intelligence Hiroaki Takizawa and Liberal Democratic Party Secretary-General Toshihiro Nikai on a presumed visit to Japan.

Authorities urge Koreans to not gather in large numbers as global cases expected to exceed 50 million
South Korea’s infectious disease control authorities say that since the novel coronavirus pandemic is now raging around the world, Koreans need to abide by disease control regulations to prevent infections from occurring at routine locations such as schools, fitness centers, and saunas.
“In the Northern Hemisphere, infections are rapidly increasing not only in North America and Europe but also in parts of the Middle East,” said Kwon Jun-wook, deputy director of the Central Disease Control Headquarters, during the daily briefing on Nov. 3.
“I would describe this not as a second wave of COVID-19 but rather as the prelude to a full-fledged pandemic.” Disease control authorities predicted that the total number of global confirmed cases will exceed 50 million early next week.

Kim Jong-un has ordered investigation into death of S. Korean official, NIS says
South Korean intelligence authorities have obtained evidence indicating that North Korea has conducted an investigation on orders from leader Kim Jong-un into the circumstances surrounding the shooting death of a South Korean fisheries official in the West Sea. Kim’s stature is also expected to be elevated to that of “grand marshal” at the 8th Workers’ Party of Korea (WPK) Congress next January -- putting him roughly on par with his predecessors, father Kim Jong-il and grandfather Kim Il-sung -- while his younger sister, WPK Central Commission First Vice Department Director Kim Yo-jong, is expected to assume a higher-ranked position.
Lawmakers Kim Byung-kee and Ha Tae-keung, the respective Democratic Party and People Power Party secretaries for the National Assembly National Intelligence Committee, related the information on Nov. 3 as having been reported by the National Intelligence Service (NIS) during a closed-door parliamentary audit of the agency at its headquarters in Seoul’s Seocho District.
“Based on the intelligence, there is evidence related to [North Korea’s] search for the [official’s] remains,” Ha explained. “There were orders to investigate the circumstances of the incident on orders from Kim Jong-un,” he added.

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Chosun Ilbo (http://english.chosun.com)
Military Loses Track of N.Korean Defector in DMZ
A North Korean man in civilian clothes scaled barbed wire and roamed the South Korean side of the demilitarized zone for 14 hours on Tuesday night.
He was spotted on a thermal observation device by South Korean border guards, but they did lost him until they picked him up 1.5 km south of the military demarcation line on Wednesday morning.
"The border guards spotted the unidentified man around 7:25 p.m. Tuesday, launched search operations and took him into custody around 9:56 a.m. Wednesday," a military spokesman said.

Elderly in Nursing Homes to Be Tested for Coronavirus
Daily coronavirus infections rose to triple digits again with 118 new cases reported as of Wednesday morning after a slight decline early this week.
Small group infections continue in nursing homes, private crammers, saunas and bars. Health authorities have promised to increase testing of patients and staff in nursing homes across the country.
Son Young-rae, a senior government epidemiologist, said, "We are confirming cases in a wide range of locations. The purpose of social distancing is to keep the local number of infections in the double digits, but at this rate we are nervous about achieving the goal."

Kim Jong-un 'Overweight But Healthy'
North Korea has planted a lot of landmines along the porous Chinese border to prevent people from moving to and fro and spreading coronavirus, the National Intelligence Service told lawmakers in a briefing Tuesday.
In the regular update on North Korea, the NIS also reported that rumors of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's health are exaggerated and he is fit and healthy if overweight at an estimated 140 kg.
The NIS said that a document from a session of the Workers Party politburo on Feb. 27 warned of a "big disaster" if the virus spreads and some 300,000 to 500,000 people could die.

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The Dong-A Ilbo (http://english.donga.com/)
Who wins U.S. presidential election depends on Rust Belt states
U.S. President Donald Trump is closing in on Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden by pulling off an Election Day comeback. The president is almost certain to win or is leading in crucial swing states, but Mr. Biden still has a shot at winning. The election result will likely to come down to Rust Belt states (Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania), which are slow-counting states.
As of at 2 a.m. Wednesday local time, President Trump had lead in key swing states, including Florida (29), Texas (38), Wisconsin (10), Michigan (16), Pennsylvania (20), and North Carolina (15). He won Florida and Texas. Trump has held a narrow lead over Biden in North Carolina but Biden has a slim chance of turning the table as 95 percent of votes have been counted.
With only 60-70 percent of votes counted in three Rust Belt states, it remains to be seen who will win in those crucial states as they still have over one million mail ballots, which are tilted in the Democrats’ favor, to count.

Hyundai to supply 3,000 hydrogen trucks to China
Hyundai Motor Company will supply hydrogen-electric trucks to China, accelerating its hydrogen economy business expansion in the country.
The South Korean automaker announced on Wednesday that it signed memorandums of understanding (MoUs) to build a hydrogen economy ecosystem with businesses in the Jing-Jin-Ji metropolitan region where capital Beijing is located and the Yangtze Delta where Shanghai is located.
Hyundai Motor Company first signed MoUs with major energy and financial companies in the Yangtze Delta on October 27. The goal is to supply over 3,000 hydrogen-electric trucks of Hyundai Motor Company to the region by building hydrogen charging stations and hydrogen production facilities and launching financial services to support hydrogen-electric cars.

Revival of ‘chick lits’ in Korea
“Chick lit,” a genre fiction that usually addresses womanhood in their 20s and 30s, is reviving. Many view “Bridget Jones’ Diary” in 1999 as the start of the genre, which also gained popularity in Korea in the early 2000s by dramas such as “My name is Kim Sam-soon” and “My Sweet Seoul, but faded out in 2010.
Recently, however, several online channels such as blogs and social networking service are uploading postings of “chick-lit” based movies such as “The Devil Wears Prada” and “Sex and the City.” “Emily in Paris,” despite being criticized as being “filled with clichés,” has gained wide popularity, particularly the lead character’s fashion style, which takes after Audrey Hepburn. Lucas Bravo, who made his debut through the series, emerged as a hot star with over one million followers on Instagram. Many fans are demanding Season 2 series.

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The KyungHyang Shinmun (http://english.khan.co.kr/)
National Intelligence Service Expects North Korea to Promote Kim Jong-un to Grand Marshal
The National Intelligence Service (NIS) predicted that North Korea would promote Kim Jong-un, chairman of the State Affairs Commission, from the current marshal to grand marshal in the military at the 8th congress of the Workers’ Party of Korea next January. The intelligence service also expected Chairman Kim’s younger sister, Kim Yo-jong, first deputy director of the Workers’ Party of Korea to be promoted to a higher position from the current alternate member of the Politburo.
On November 3, the National Intelligence Service reported movements among the leaders of North Korea including these details in a parliamentary inspection by the Intelligence Committee, held at the NIS head office in Naegok-dong, Seoul. In a briefing, the ruling and opposition party secretaries of the Intelligence Committee, Democratic Party of Korea lawmaker Kim Byung-kee and People Power Party lawmaker Ha Tae-kyeung said, “Chairman Kim is currently a marshal, but we heard there’s a possibility that he could be promoted to grand marshal, which would put him on par with Kim Jong-il and Kim Il-sung,” and also said, “The NIS is keeping an eye on the North, for Pyongyang could announce a restructuring of its power structure to strengthen the status of Kim Jong-un as well as new domestic and international strategies at the 8th party congress.”

“Despite Traffic Jams and No Roads... Riders Can’t Refuse AI Orders”
Orders from apartment complexes and parks restricted to motorcycles, low delivery fees based on a linear distance ignoring roads and traffic conditions, tight delivery times based on an impossible route,... The riders (delivery workers) of Coupang Eats and Baemin gave statements on the losses they suffered due to automatic orders based on artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms recently introduced by food delivery platforms.
The Rider Union held a press conference at the Korean Federation of Clerical & Financial Labor Unions in Jung-gu, Seoul on November 3 and announced that the algorithm-based automatic order-assignment system used by food delivery platforms deteriorated the working conditions of the riders. They argued that the new system practically directed and supervised the workers by determining labor conditions, including delivery fees, and evaluating the workers by scoring them.

People Without Masks in Internet Cafes and Department Stores Will Be Fined Beginning Nov. 13
On November 1, the government announced a revised physical (social) distancing policy. Unlike the previous policy, which jumped from everyday quarantine to a ban on gatherings at high-risk facilities, the revised policy included more specific stages between the two measures in order to ease the drastic gap. The new policy also focused more on a “customized” response allowing local areas to adjust the level of distancing according to their situations.
The government also eased the standard for raising the level of distancing to the highest level 3, but expanded the facilities where preventive measures, such as wearing masks, will be mandatory to general facilities, such as internet cafes and wedding halls after a series of COVID-19 cases were confirmed in everyday places, such as the sauna, office, and school.

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Maeil Business News Korea (http://www.pulsenews.co.kr/).
Kakao reports best results in Q3 on stellar earnings from businesses across board
Kakao Corp., South Korea’s largest messaging app operator, recorded best-ever quarterly results in the third quarter thanks to stellar performance of both platform and content businesses driven by surging demand for contactless services amid the prolonged Covid-19.
The company in a regulatory filing on Thursday said its consolidated operating income for the third quarter ended September hit 120.2 billion won ($106.5 million), exceeding 100 billion won for the first time since its inception and making a fresh new record for the seventh quarter in a row. The operating profit gained 23 percent from the previous quarter and doubled from 59.1 billion won booked a year earlier.
Revenue reached 1.1 trillion won, also the highest ever quarterly result. It was up 15 percent quarter-on-quarter and 41 percent year-on-year. Net profit came at 143.7 billion won, a tad down 1 percent on quarter but more than trippled from a year ago.

Kyochon F&B debuts at Kospi on record retail fad in chicken-loving S Korea
Chicken-loving South Koreans proved to have a similar stomach for poultry-themed stock as the country’s first chicken franchise stock Kyochon F&B Co. became the biggest-ever retail sensation on the main Kospi.
Its initial public offering of 1.16 million issues from Kyochon F&B reserved for two-day retail subscription before listing on Nov. 12 drew 9.4 trillion won ($8.3 billion) bids, showing a competition ratio of 1,318 against one. The IPO became the biggest retail-loving stock to debut on Kospi.
Big Hit Entertainment, the label behind K-pop superstar BTS, drew a retail competition ratio of 607 to 1 and SK Biopharm 323 to 1. Kakao Games drew bigger 1,524 to 1 in September but was listed on Kosdaq.

Singapore-based Prestige Biopharma wins preliminary approval for Kospi debut
Prestige Biopharma, a Singapore-based biopharmaceutical company that mainly develops biosimilars and new antibody therapeutics, has gained preliminary approval from the Korea Exchange to go public in South Korea’s main Kospi market, said the company on Wednesday.
Prestige Biopharma – founded in Singapore in 2015 – is a biopharmaceutical company focusing on the development of antibody drugs, mostly biosimilars for cancer and rheumatism. Its major pipeline includes HD021, a biosimilar of Roche’s Herceptin for breast cancer and metastatic gastric cancer treatment; HD204, a biosimilar of Roche’s Avastin for breast cancer, lung cancer, stomach cancer, colorectal cancer, and ovarian cancer; and PBP1502, a biosimilar of AbbVie’s Humira for rheumarthritis and psoriasis.

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What’s ticking around the world at this second? 
See what the world media around the world have to report:

USA Today  www.usatoday.com aallman@gannett.com
The New York Times  www.nytimes.com inytletters@nytimes.com 
Wall Street Journal  www.wsj.com  support@wsj.com,  service@wsj-asia.com 
Financial Times  www.ft.com ean@ft.com 
The Times  www.thetimes.co.uk help@timesplus.co.uk 
The Sun  www.thesun.co.uk talkback@the-sun.co.uk 
Chinese People's Daily  www.people.com.cn kf@people.cn 
China Daily  www.chinadaily.com.cn circulation@chinadaily.com.cn 
GwangmyeongDaily  www.gmw.cn webmaster@gmw.cn 
Japan's Yomiuri  www.yomiuri.co.jp japannews@yomiuri.com 
Asahi  www.asahi.com customer-support@asahi.com 
Mainichi  www.mainichi.jp
Le Monde  www.ilemonde.com
Italy LaRepubblica  www.quotidiano.repubblica.it vittorio.zucconi@gmail.com 
Germany Frankfurter AllgemeineZeitung  www.faz.net anzeigen.ausland@faz.de 
SüddeutscheZeitung  www.sueddeutsche.de forum@sueddeutsche.de 
Australia Brisbane Times  www.brisbanetimes.com.au syndication@fairfaxmedia.com.au 
Sydney Morning Herald  www.smh.com.au
Colombia Reports  www.colombiareports.com
Bogota Free Planet  www.bogotafreeplanet.com,bfp@bogotafreeplanet.com
El Universal  www.eluniversal.com.mx/english  
Andes  www.redaktionstest.net/andes-info-ec/ 
Ecuador Times  www.ecuadortimes.net/  
The Jordan Times  www.jordantimes.com/ 
LSM.lv  www.lsm.lv/
The Baltic Times www.baltictimes.com lithuania@baltictimes.com, estonia@baltictimes.com, editor@baltictimes.com
El Pais  https://english.elpais.com/ 
Philippine Daily Inquirer  www.inquirer.net/ 
Daily News Hungary  https://dailynewshungary.com/ 
Budapest Times  www.budapesttimes.hu/ 
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Morocco: www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfFmp2sVvSE
And many other countries.
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