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Tuesday, July 7, 2026
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HD Hyundai Electric267260.KS

KOSPIHeavy Industrieshd-hyundaielectric.com

About HD Hyundai Electric

HD Hyundai Electric manufactures the heavy equipment that moves electricity: power transformers, high- and medium-voltage switchgear, rotating machinery such as generators and motors, and integrated energy solutions. Spun out of the former Hyundai Heavy Industries, it operates within the HD Hyundai Group and serves electric utilities, industrial plants, shipbuilders and data-center developers. North America and the Middle East are key export destinations alongside its domestic base. The company earns revenue from long-lead-time equipment orders, typically booked well before delivery, which gives its backlog an important forward-looking role.

The structural story is grid investment: aging transmission networks, renewable-energy integration and electricity demand from data centers have lengthened order books across the global power-equipment industry, and investors gauge how durable that capital-spending wave proves. Export weighting makes the company sensitive to the won-dollar rate and to trade measures affecting electrical equipment. Because contracts precede delivery by years, backlog pricing locks in future margins, for better or worse. Its position inside a chaebol group and historical ties to shipbuilding demand round out the profile.

The business dates to the late 1970s, when Hyundai Heavy Industries began producing transformers and switchgear in Ulsan to serve Korea's electrification drive, and for four decades it operated as the shipbuilder's electro-electric systems division. It became an independent listed company in April 2017, when Hyundai Heavy Industries split itself into four firms, and adopted the HD prefix in 2023 as the group rebranded. Manufacturing now spans the original Ulsan complex, a transformer plant in Alabama serving American utilities, and a facility in China, while the parent holding company HD Hyundai remains its controlling shareholder.

Power equipment is an engineering-to-order trade: each large transformer is custom-designed, must pass demanding type tests, and can take years from order to energization, so customer qualification lists and factory test capability function as competitive moats. Utilities favor proven suppliers because failure costs dwarf equipment prices, which entrenches incumbents once approved. The Alabama plant gives the company local-content standing in the United States, its most important export market, and shipboard electrical gear supplied to affiliated yards adds a captive channel. Globally it competes with Hitachi Energy, Siemens Energy, and GE Vernova, and at home with Hyosung Heavy Industries and LS Electric.

Company profile by LineVest editorial. Journalism, not investment advice. Commission a full DART-based report on HD Hyundai Electric

HD Hyundai Electric coverage

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Frequently asked questions

What does HD Hyundai Electric do?

HD Hyundai Electric manufactures heavy electrical equipment: power transformers, high- and medium-voltage switchgear, rotating machines such as motors and generators, and integrated energy solutions. Its customers include electric utilities, industrial plants, data-center builders, and shipyards, with production sites in Korea, the United States, and China.

Who controls HD Hyundai Electric?

HD Hyundai, the group holding company, is the controlling shareholder, and the group is in turn controlled by the founding Chung family, with Chung Mong-joon's branch at the top of the ownership chain. Minority shares trade freely on the Korean market among institutional and individual investors.

How can foreign investors get exposure to HD Hyundai Electric?

The company's stock trades on the Korea Exchange under ticker 267260 and is accessible through brokerages offering Korean equity trading. It is also held within Korea-focused index funds and some global infrastructure or grid-equipment thematic funds. This information explains access routes and is not a recommendation to invest.

Answers are editorial summaries for general information, not investment advice.

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