Hanil Cement300720.KS
About Hanil Cement
Hanil Cement is one of Korea's major cement producers, supplying bulk cement, ready-mixed concrete, and dry mortar to domestic construction sites. It operates large kilns in the inland Danyang area along with distribution terminals, and it sits within the Hanil group alongside sister company Hanil Hyundai Cement, added when the group purchased Hyundai Cement. A holding company, Hanil Holdings, stands atop the structure. Sales are almost entirely domestic and track construction activity; profitability swings with cement pricing, fuel costs for kilns, and utilization across an industry served by only a handful of producers.
The investment case is a domestic oligopoly story: a small number of cement makers serve a market where demand follows housing starts and government civil works with a lag. Investors watch coal and power costs, since kilns are energy-intensive, and carbon regulation, which raises long-run compliance costs and rewards producers that substitute alternative fuels. The Hanil Holdings structure above the listed operating company frames governance analysis. With no meaningful export outlet, the shares carry concentrated exposure to Korean construction volumes.
Hanil Cement was founded in 1961 by Huh Chae-kyung and built its production base around the limestone belt of Danyang in central Korea, staying under Huh family stewardship for decades as a focused cement maker. In 2017 it teamed with a financial partner to acquire Hyundai Cement, which became sister company Hanil Hyundai Cement and greatly expanded the group's kiln capacity. A 2018 reorganization then split the original firm into Hanil Holdings, the listed parent, and a new operating company carrying the Hanil Cement name and today's ticker, which returned to the exchange as a separate listing that year.
Cement economics are regional because the product is heavy and inexpensive relative to freight, so Hanil's inland plants ship by rail and truck to distribution silos near demand centers while coastal competitors rely on sea transport. Revenue comes from bulk cement sold to ready-mixed concrete producers, from the company's own concrete operations, and from dry mortar sold under the well-known Remital name, a strong position in that niche. Prices are effectively negotiated industry-wide with large concrete buyers, and profitability turns on kiln fuel, power, and logistics costs, with waste-derived alternative fuels increasingly substituting for imported coal in the kilns.
Company profile by LineVest editorial. Journalism, not investment advice. Commission a full DART-based report on Hanil Cement →
Hanil Cement coverage
No Hanil Cement stories yet — LineVest publishes Korean market news daily, and new coverage of Hanil Cement will appear here automatically.
Browse the latest Korean market news →Frequently asked questions
What does Hanil Cement do?
Hanil Cement produces cement, ready-mixed concrete, and dry mortar for the Korean construction market. Its kilns near Danyang process local limestone, and products reach building sites through rail-linked distribution terminals. Together with sister company Hanil Hyundai Cement, it forms one of the country's largest cement groups.
Who controls Hanil Cement?
The founding Huh family controls the company through Hanil Holdings, the group's listed parent created in a 2018 restructuring. The family has guided the business since its 1961 founding, and family-connected leadership continues to oversee both Hanil Cement and affiliated producer Hanil Hyundai Cement within the group.
How can foreign investors get exposure to Hanil Cement?
The operating company's shares trade on the Korea Exchange's KOSPI market under ticker 300720. Foreign investors can hold the stock directly via brokers offering Korean market access, or indirectly through funds tracking Korean indexes. Parent company Hanil Holdings is listed separately on the exchange under its own code.
Answers are editorial summaries for general information, not investment advice.
Go deeper than the headline
You just read what happened. Here's how to read what it means.
The Korean market week, in one email
Every Saturday: the week's key KOSPI & KOSDAQ stories, earnings and foreign flows — picked from our daily coverage. Free, no card required.
Want it every morning before the open? LineVest Daily — $2.99/mo →
Full report on Hanil Cement
We read Hanil Cement's latest DART filing in full — financials under K-IFRS, governance, and what it means for the stock. PDF in your inbox within 3 hours.
$12 · one-time
Get the Hanil Cement reportFollow the whole market
Reading several Korean stocks a week? Read every analysis article the moment it publishes — full daily KOSPI & KOSDAQ coverage plus the 90-day archive.
$9.99 · monthly
SubscribeIndependent journalism based on primary DART filings — not investment advice. No brokerage affiliation.