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Tuesday, July 7, 2026
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Woori Financial Group316140.KS

KOSPIFinancialswoorifg.com

About Woori Financial Group

Woori Financial Group is the holding company for Woori Bank, one of South Korea's four largest commercial banks, with roots in some of the country's oldest banking institutions. The group was rebuilt as a listed holding company after a state rescue during the Asian financial crisis era, and the government's deposit-insurance agency subsequently sold down its stake, moving the group toward fully private ownership with a consortium of domestic institutional investors as anchor shareholders. Banking dominates earnings to a greater degree than at peers, as the group has been rebuilding securities and insurance operations to round out its portfolio.

The structural gap versus other Korean financial groups is diversification: with profits concentrated in the bank, Woori is more exposed to net-interest-margin cycles and domestic loan regulation, and investors track its efforts to acquire or build non-bank subsidiaries as the main strategic variable. The legacy of state ownership shapes its governance, with an anchor-investor shareholder base and recurring supervisory attention to internal controls after compliance lapses at the bank. Valuation typically sits at a discount to peers, making it a frequent subject of the corporate value-up discussion, and capital-ratio headroom governs the pace of dividends and buybacks.

Woori's roots reach to 1899 and the Daehan Cheon-il Bank, among Korea's first domestic banks, whose successors, Commercial Bank of Korea and Hanil Bank, merged during the Asian financial crisis into Hanvit Bank under state recapitalization. The government created Woori Finance Holdings in 2001 as Korea's first financial holding company to manage the rescued institutions. That structure was dismantled in 2014 as units were sold, leaving Woori Bank standalone, and a new holding company, Woori Financial Group, was re-established in 2019. The deposit-insurance agency then sold down its stake, completing a decades-long journey from nationalization back to private ownership.

Earnings rely on the classic banking spread: a nationwide deposit franchise funds household mortgages, consumer credit, and a corporate loan book with particular strength among large companies and small businesses, while the card subsidiary adds fee income. Because non-bank operations are smaller than at rival groups, Woori has been rebuilding investment banking and securities capabilities, including re-establishing a brokerage arm in 2024, and pursuing insurance acquisitions to diversify. Overseas, subsidiaries in Southeast Asia serve local retail and Korean corporate clients. The group competes with three larger-capitalized peers largely on corporate relationships and pricing, with its relative valuation discount making capital returns and diversification progress the focal investor questions.

Company profile by LineVest editorial. Journalism, not investment advice. Commission a full DART-based report on Woori Financial Group

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Frequently asked questions

What does Woori Financial Group do?

Woori Financial Group is the holding company for Woori Bank, one of South Korea's four largest commercial banks, tracing its lineage to institutions founded in 1899. Banking dominates its earnings, supplemented by credit-card and capital-markets subsidiaries, and the group has been rebuilding securities and insurance operations to broaden its portfolio.

Who controls Woori Financial Group?

No single controlling shareholder exists. After the state deposit-insurance agency sold down its rescue-era stake, ownership settled among a consortium of domestic institutional anchor investors, Korea's National Pension Service, the employee stock-ownership association, and foreign institutions, with governance overseen by the board and financial supervisors.

How can foreign investors get exposure to Woori Financial Group?

The group's shares are listed on the Korea Exchange under ticker 316140, and American depositary receipts trade on the New York Stock Exchange. Foreign investors can use either avenue or gain indirect exposure through Korea-focused ETFs and regional bank-sector funds that hold the stock.

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

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