Korean Air003490.KS
About Korean Air
Korean Air is South Korea's flag carrier, operating an international and domestic network for passengers alongside one of the industry's more significant dedicated cargo operations. It also runs an aerospace division that manufactures aircraft structures and performs maintenance work, including for military customers. The airline anchors the Hanjin Group under holding company Hanjin KAL and completed the acquisition of Asiana Airlines, consolidating Korea's two full-service carriers under one roof. Revenue comes from passenger ticket sales across cabin classes, freight carried in bellyhold and dedicated freighters, and aerospace contracts.
Airline economics give the stock textbook cyclicality: jet fuel prices, the won-dollar exchange rate on dollar-denominated costs and debt, and swings in cargo yields drive earnings more than seat growth. The integration of Asiana is the defining structural project, encompassing fleet, network and workforce combination plus route remedies required by competition authorities in multiple jurisdictions. Investors also weigh the carrier's position under Hanjin KAL's control, its cargo franchise as a differentiator among global peers, and Korea's geographic role as a transpacific transfer hub.
Korean Air began in 1962 as a state-owned carrier and was privatized in 1969, when Hanjin founder Cho Choong-hoon took over the struggling airline and built it into Korea's flag carrier. It added an aerospace manufacturing division in 1976, becoming a rare airline that also builds aircraft structures, and in 2000 it co-founded the SkyTeam alliance with Delta, Air France, and Aeromexico. The 2013 spin-off of holding company Hanjin KAL placed the airline beneath a formal holding structure, and its agreement to acquire rival Asiana Airlines—announced in 2020 and cleared by regulators across multiple jurisdictions—reshaped Korean aviation by the end of 2024.
The route network is engineered around Incheon's role as a transfer hub: the airline sells not just Korea-origin travel but one-stop connectivity between the Americas and Asia, so hub scheduling and transpacific slots are core assets. Premium cabins and corporate contracts carry disproportionate profitability on long-haul routes, while the SKYPASS loyalty program deepens customer lock-in. Cargo is run as a distinct franchise with dedicated freighters, giving the company flexibility to chase semiconductor, battery, and e-commerce freight when passenger demand softens. The aerospace division supplies structures to both Boeing and Airbus and performs military maintenance work, a quiet diversifier most rival airlines lack.
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Korean Air coverage
2 articles
Korean Air Pegs ₩900 Billion–₩1 Trillion Price Tag on Asiana Integration, Targets Breakeven by End-2028
Korean Air estimates ₩900 billion to ₩1 trillion to integrate Asiana Airlines, with ₩300 billion in annual synergies expected to offset costs by end-2028 to early 2029.
PremiumKorean Air (003490.KS) Q1 2026: Operating Profit Surges 47% to ₩516.9B as Middle East War Fuels European Route Windfall
Frequently asked questions
What does Korean Air do?
Korean Air is South Korea's flag carrier, flying passengers across an international and domestic network centered on Incheon, and operating one of the industry's larger dedicated cargo businesses. It also runs an aerospace division that manufactures aircraft structures for Boeing and Airbus and performs maintenance, including military work.
Who controls Korean Air?
Holding company Hanjin KAL is the controlling shareholder, and Hanjin KAL is in turn led by the founding Cho family under chairman Cho Won-tae. The state-run Korea Development Bank became a shareholder of the holding company in connection with the Asiana acquisition, adding a public-sector presence.
How can foreign investors get exposure to Korean Air?
Korean Air shares are listed on the Korea Exchange under ticker 003490 and can be purchased through brokerages offering Korean market access. The airline is included in major Korean equity indexes, so index funds tracking Korea provide indirect exposure as well. This information is descriptive and not investment advice.
Answers are editorial summaries for general information, not investment advice.
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