Shipbuilders lift South Korean stocks as Asian markets trade mixed

By Yoo Joonha Posted : January 8, 2026, 17:44 Updated : January 8, 2026, 17:44
Graphics by AJP Song Ji-yoon
 

SEOUL, January 08 (AJP) - Asian equities were mixed on Thursday, while South Korean stocks ended marginally higher as a sharp rally in shipbuilding shares offset weakness in technology-heavy stocks.

In Seoul, the benchmark KOSPI edged up 0.03 percent to close at 4,552.37, finishing largely flat as gains among shipbuilders countered declines elsewhere. Buying in the sector was driven by rising expectations of large shipbuilding and offshore project orders linked to Canada.

The tech-heavy KOSDAQ underperformed, slipping 0.3 percent to 944.06, as investors locked in profits in selected growth and small-cap shares.

Shipbuilders led the market higher. Hanwha Ocean jumped 6.6 percent to 129,300 won, emerging as one of the day’s top performers on optimism over potential large-scale contracts. HD Hyundai Heavy Industries climbed 4.9 percent to 584,000 won, while SK Oceanplant gained 5.4 percent to 20,850 won.

Samsung Heavy Industries rose 4.1 percent to 26,400 won, and HJ Shipbuilding & Construction added 1.9 percent to 24,750 won, reflecting broad-based strength across the sector.

The rally was further supported by fresh order news. HD Hyundai Marine Engine said it had signed a ship engine supply contract with China’s Jiangsu New Yangzi Shipbuilding, according to a regulatory filing. The contract is valued at 24.3 billion won ($18.2 million), equivalent to 7.7 percent of the company’s 2024 consolidated revenue of 315.8 billion won.

Outside shipbuilding, entertainment stocks rebounded after recent volatility. Shares of major K-pop agencies rose as investors looked beyond fading expectations for an easing of China’s restrictions on Korean cultural content and refocused on longer-term growth prospects.

SM Entertainment gained 1.3 percent to 117,000 won, while YG Entertainment surged 5.1 percent to 67,600 won. JYP Entertainment rose 1.7 percent to 71,200 won, and Hybe added 1.5 percent to 334,000 won, supported by expectations of high-profile artist comebacks slated for 2026.

The Korean won weakened slightly amid steady demand for the U.S. dollar, closing at 1,451.59 per dollar as of 4:20 p.m. local time.

Elsewhere in Asia, major markets finished little changed. Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 1.6 percent to 51,117.3, while China’s Shanghai Composite edged down 0.07 percent to 4,083, as investors remained cautious ahead of global economic data and policy signals.

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