The Borneo Post (Sabah)

S.Korea’s Lotte Group: Missile row no reason to pull out of China

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SEOUL: South Korea’s Lotte Group will continue to invest in its China business despite diplomatic tensions over the deployment of a US missile defence system, a Lotte executive said yesterday, denying rumours it wants to scale back there.

Chinese authoritie­s closed dozens of Lotte retail stores following inspection­s, ramping up pressure on Korea’s fifth-largest family-run conglomera­te after it agreed to provide land for the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile system outside Seoul.

South Korea and its ally the United States say the system is designed to thwart nuclear-armed North Korea’s missile threat, but Beijing says its radar can also reach far into China.

Chinese state media have called for a boycott of Lotte businesses in response to the THAAD deployment.

“It’s been 20 years since Lotte entered the China market ... we believe the China business is still in an investment period,” high-ranking executive Hwang Kag-gyu told reporters.

South Korean media including Yonhap have raised the possibilit­y of Lotte scaling back its China business in the wake of the backlash against the company there.

Lotte has not outlined a strategy to cope with the difficulti­es besides ‘waiting’ for it to blow over.

Chinese signs reading “(We) understand you. So (we) wait,” were put up in Lotte’s flagship department store in Seoul last month.

“As a market, China isn’t yet fully developed, especially in the middle and western regions. In

It’s been 20 years since Lotte entered the China market ... we believe the China business is still in an investment period. Hwang Kag-gyu, Lotte Group high-ranking executive

order to grow globally, China is needed,” a Lotte official who declined to be identified said.

“The THAAD issue is not something one company can solve.”

Out of 99 Lotte hypermarke­ts in China, 75 had been closed by Chinese authoritie­s as of April 2, a Lotte Mart spokesman said.

Lotte Mart reported 1.13 trillion won (US$1.01 billion) in China sales last year.

China is Lotte’s biggest overseas market and generated about 3 trillion won in 2016 revenue.

It is one of four strategic markets along with Vietnam, Russia and Indonesia that Lotte has been focusing on, as retail growth in its home market slows.

Hwang said the planned initial public offering of Hotel Lotte would depend on its key dutyfree business recovering from the “THAAD effect”. What had been a US$4.5 billion IPO was shelved last year.

“All we can do is watch,” he said.

South Korean airlines and tourism operators have also experience­d discrimina­tory tactics from China, hitting the country’s duty free market. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Hwang Kag-gyu, head of Lotte Corporate Innovation Office, attends a news conference in Seoul, South Korea, April 3. South Korea’s Lotte Group will continue to invest in its China business despite diplomatic tensions over the deployment of a US missile...
Hwang Kag-gyu, head of Lotte Corporate Innovation Office, attends a news conference in Seoul, South Korea, April 3. South Korea’s Lotte Group will continue to invest in its China business despite diplomatic tensions over the deployment of a US missile...

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