Korea-US-Global Briefing

 

Korea-US-Global  Briefing

Wednesday, July 15, 2026


Listen to the audio version


TOP STORY
USTR's proposed Section 301 forced-labor tariffs (10-12.5%) on 60 economies, including Korea, are testing the bilateral trade deal. Seoul is pressing Washington to keep any new action inside the existing framework that capped reciprocal tariffs at 15% in exchange for Korea's $350B US investment pledge.


TRADE & TARIFF
Korea's Trade Minister Yeo Han-koo urged the US to resolve the USTR forced-labor probe and future disputes within the boundaries of the Korea-US deal rather than as standalone actions.

Commerce Secretary Lutnick said he wants Samsung and SK Hynix to build plants in the US, raising the stakes on how Korea's $350B commitment gets allocated domestically vs. stateside.


SECTOR WATCH
Semiconductors: SK Hynix completed a Nasdaq ADR listing this month, one of the largest US share sales this year, riding the AI memory boom; the inflows from the conversion helped strengthen KRW this week.

Samsung denied a Bloomberg report that it's weighing its own ADR listing, saying fundraising isn't urgent. I, too, see Samsung not needing the cash and being much more diversified than SK.


HANWHA WATCH
Hanwha Philly Shipyard's $5B infrastructure buildout (adding two docks, three quays) continues to anchor Korea's US shipbuilding push, part of the $150B shipbuilding investment fund tied to the broader trade deal, with capacity set to scale from roughly one ship a year to up to twenty.


BCW TAKE
The USTR's proposed Section 301 tariffs probe is a test case for how Washington treats Korea and how Samsung and Hyundai mega-investments can shape negotiations.

PIECES Magazine (CoreAxis Lab) just published a Q&A with Don on cross-cultural, cross-border leadership. The through-line: global expansion doesn't succeed on how rigidly a company holds its headquarters' playbook, but on how fast and accurately it adapts to local realities.


"The companies that struggle are usually the ones trying to run the local operation on headquarters' timing and assumptions rather than adapting to how business actually gets done on the ground."


Three takeaways:

  • The real barrier isn't language or market knowledge: it's speed of adaptation to local decision-making and trust structures.
  • The home-market playbook that built success: cadence, reporting lines, how authority is set, is exactly what a team reads differently.
  • The leaders who matter operate credibly in both systems at once, knowing when to apply the HQ approach and when to defer to local practice.


Read the full interview: coreaxislab.com


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