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Tuesday, July 7, 2026
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Lotte Chemical011170.KS

KOSPIEnergy & Chemicalslottechem.com

About Lotte Chemical

Lotte Chemical is one of South Korea's largest petrochemical producers, cracking naphtha and other feedstocks into ethylene, propylene, and downstream plastics such as polyethylene, polypropylene, and PET intermediates. Domestic complexes are supplemented by overseas operations, including Lotte Chemical Titan in Malaysia and an ethane-based joint venture on the U.S. Gulf Coast. The company is a core industrial affiliate of Lotte Group and has moved into battery materials through its stake in copper-foil maker Lotte Energy Materials. Profitability follows the spread between feedstock costs and commodity polymer prices across regional markets.

This is a deeply cyclical stock, and foreign investors treat it as leveraged exposure to the global commodity-chemical cycle, particularly Chinese supply additions that have pressured Asian operating rates. Feedstock diversity matters: naphtha-based Korean plants compete against ethane-advantaged U.S. and Middle Eastern capacity, which the company partly hedges through its own American venture. Its role within Lotte Group finances, including support flowing between affiliates, is a recurring governance question. The buildout in battery materials adds a growth angle but also capital-intensity risk.

Lotte Chemical began in 1976 as Honam Petrochemical Corporation, the venture that carried Lotte Group into heavy industry, anchored by a naphtha-cracking complex in Yeosu on Korea's southern coast. Expansion came through acquisition as much as construction: KP Chemical, an aromatics and PET business assembled from assets of the collapsed Kohap group, was purchased in 2004, and Malaysian polyolefin producer Titan Chemicals followed in 2010. Honam Petrochemical and KP Chemical merged in 2012 under the Lotte Chemical name. A Louisiana ethane-cracker joint venture began commercial operation in 2019, and the 2023 acquisition of Iljin Materials created Lotte Energy Materials.

Petrochemicals is a spread business: the company buys naphtha and other feedstocks, converts them into olefins and aromatics, and sells polymers whose prices are set by regional commodity markets, so profit is the gap between the two rather than anything brand-driven. Scale, integration from cracker to downstream resin, and feedstock flexibility across naphtha in Korea, ethane in the United States, and gas-linked inputs elsewhere are the main competitive levers. Sales run through direct contracts with converters and traders across Asia. The battery-materials subsidiary sells copper foil to cell manufacturers, a qualification-driven business with economics closer to precision manufacturing than commodity chemistry.

Company profile by LineVest editorial. Journalism, not investment advice. Commission a full DART-based report on Lotte Chemical

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Frequently asked questions

What does Lotte Chemical do?

Lotte Chemical produces basic petrochemicals and plastics, including ethylene, propylene, polyethylene, polypropylene, and PET-related intermediates, from complexes in South Korea, Malaysia, and the United States. Its products go into packaging, automotive parts, textiles, and construction materials, and a subsidiary manufactures copper foil for lithium-ion batteries.

Who controls Lotte Chemical?

Lotte Chemical is controlled through Lotte Group's holding structure, with Lotte Corp and affiliated group entities together holding the controlling interest. The group is led by Chairman Shin Dong-bin of the founding Shin family. Domestic institutions, foreign funds, and individual shareholders own the remaining shares traded on the exchange.

How can foreign investors get exposure to Lotte Chemical?

The shares trade on the KOSPI market of the Korea Exchange under ticker 011170. Foreign investors can buy them directly through brokers with Korean market access after completing local registration requirements, or hold the stock indirectly through funds tracking Korean equity or Asian chemical-sector benchmarks.

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

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