Hyundai Mobis012330.KS
About Hyundai Mobis
Hyundai Mobis is the parts-making pillar of the Hyundai Motor Group and one of the world's larger automotive suppliers. Its module business assembles chassis, cockpit, and front-end modules and core components, including electrification parts such as motors and battery systems, primarily for Hyundai Motor and Kia. A second, steadier segment supplies after-sales spare parts for the tens of millions of Hyundai and Kia vehicles already on the road worldwide, a business with annuity-like characteristics. The company also develops advanced driver-assistance, autonomous-driving, and connectivity technologies, and it is the largest shareholder of Hyundai Motor within the group's ownership loop.
Two structural features dominate the investor discussion. First, dependence on Hyundai Motor and Kia for the bulk of module revenue means volumes track group vehicle production, with diversification toward outside automakers a slow-moving ambition. Second, the company sits at the top of the group's circular shareholding, holding the key stake in Hyundai Motor, so any restructuring of the chaebol's ownership would likely run through Mobis, and its shares often move on governance speculation as much as on operations. The after-parts business cushions cyclicality, and the company has laid out shareholder-return commitments that appeal to value-oriented foreign funds.
Hyundai Mobis started life in 1977 as Hyundai Precision & Industry, a manufacturer of shipping containers that later built the Galloper sport-utility vehicle. During the group's post-crisis restructuring around 2000, the company shed vehicle assembly, took the Mobis name, and was repurposed as the Hyundai Motor Group's dedicated parts and module specialist, absorbing the after-sales parts business for Hyundai and Kia vehicles. That reinvention also made it the group's structural keystone: it became the largest shareholder of Hyundai Motor, placing it at the top of the circular ownership loop that any future governance reorganization would need to address.
The module business operates on just-in-sequence supply: plants located beside Hyundai and Kia assembly lines deliver pre-assembled chassis, cockpit, and front-end modules timed to each vehicle, with pricing set through periodic negotiations typical of captive suppliers. Electrification components, including drive motors and battery-system assemblies, are sold into the group's EV programs and increasingly pitched to outside automakers. The after-sales segment sells genuine spare parts through global distribution networks at retail-like margins, generating dependable cash from the enormous installed base of group vehicles regardless of new-car cycles. Competitive positioning combines guaranteed group volume with growing electronics content per vehicle.
Company profile by LineVest editorial. Journalism, not investment advice. Commission a full DART-based report on Hyundai Mobis →
Hyundai Mobis coverage
3 articles
Hyundai Mobis and HL Mando Break Into Atlas Supply Chain as Korea Eyes 25,000-Robot Deployment by 2028
Hyundai Mobis (012330.KS) secures Atlas actuator supply role while HL Mando (204320.KS) targets Boston Dynamics and Tesla Optimus, as Hyundai plans 25,000-unit robot deployment by 2028.

Hyundai Mobis Q1 2026: Revenue Up 5.5% to KRW 15.6T, Net Income Slides 14% on Equity-Method Gap
Hyundai Mobis posted Q1 2026 revenue of KRW 15.56 trillion (+5.5% YoY), with operating profit up 3.3%, while net income fell 14.4% on lower equity-method gains from affiliates.

Hyundai Mobis FY2025 Financial Report: Profit Divergence
Frequently asked questions
What does Hyundai Mobis do?
Hyundai Mobis is the Hyundai Motor Group's parts arm and one of the world's largest automotive suppliers. It assembles chassis, cockpit, and front-end modules, produces electrification components such as motors and battery systems, develops driver-assistance technology, and runs a global after-sales parts business for Hyundai and Kia vehicles.
Who controls Hyundai Mobis?
Kia is the largest shareholder, with chairman Chung Euisun and family members holding direct stakes, embedding Mobis in the Hyundai Motor Group's circular ownership. Mobis itself owns the key stake in Hyundai Motor, so control of the entire group effectively runs through this company, magnifying its governance importance.
How can foreign investors get exposure to Hyundai Mobis?
Hyundai Mobis trades on the Korea Exchange under ticker 012330. The company has no U.S.-listed depositary receipts, so foreign investors usually buy the Seoul shares through brokers with Korean market access or gain exposure through Korea-focused ETFs and global auto-parts sector funds holding the stock.
Answers are editorial summaries for general information, not investment advice.
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