North-linked firms soar on Seoul market after summit

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AFP, Seoul :
Shares in South Korean builders, railway component makers and other firms with links to the North rocketed on Monday as Friday’s inter-Korea summit fuelled optimism for new cross-border projects.
The historic meeting saw the North’s leader Kim Jong Un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in vowing to “encourage more active cooperation, exchanges” and promote “co-prosperity”.
The declaration sent shares of many firms which were once involved in now moribund inter-Korean projects shooting up on the Seoul stock market.
Shares of Hyundai Engineering & Construction-which built buildings at the now-shuttered Kaesong jointly-run industrial complex in the North- surged 26 percent.
The zone-where 53,000 North Korean workers once churned out products ranging from watches to clothes for some 120 South Korean companies-was shuttered in 2016 under Moon’s conservative predecessor Park Geun-hye.
Kim and Moon agreed on Friday to open a joint liaison office in the Kaesong area-a move seen by some as a first step toward reopening the compound, although UN Security Council sanctions imposed on the North over its missile programmes could yet stymie such hopes.
Nam Kwang Engineering & Construction, which once ran a construction materials factory in the complex, jumped 15 percent.
Apparel maker Good People rose 6.3 percent, although North Korea is banned from both importing and exporting textiles under the UN measures.
Hyundai Elevator jumped 11 percent. It has a controlling stake in Hyundai Asan, which holds rights from Pyongyang and Seoul for several cross-border projects including the Kaesong development.
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