Korea Antitrust Watchdog Raids LG Chem, Hanwha Solutions, OCI, Aekyung Over PVC and Plasticizer Cartel Probe
TL;DR - Korea's Fair Trade Commission sent investigators on May 14 to LG Chem, Hanwha Solutions, OCI and Aekyung over suspected PVC and plasticizer price-fixing. - Two of the four firms (LG Chem and Hanwha Solutions) supply polyvinyl chloride, while all four produce plasticizers, regulators and industry sources told local media. - The probe is scheduled to continue through Friday, May 15, with focus on whether the Middle East-driven naphtha squeeze was used as cover for coordinated price hikes.
Lead
Korea's antitrust regulator on Thursday opened on-site investigations into four of the country's largest petrochemical producers — LG Chem (051910.KS), Hanwha Solutions, OCI and Aekyung Chemical — over allegations they colluded on prices for polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and plasticizers. The Korea Times reported that investigators from the Fair Trade Commission (KFTC), Korea's competition regulator, were dispatched to the four companies to secure documents in a probe expected to run through Friday. Industry daily Asiae said investigators entered offices in both Seoul and the petrochemical hub of Yeosu.
What Happened
According to Yonhap News Agency and Chosun Biz, KFTC officials arrived at LG Chem, Hanwha Solutions, Aekyung and OCI offices on the morning of May 14 to seize records tied to the companies' PVC and plasticizer businesses. The Korea Times, citing unnamed sources, wrote that the four companies are suspected of "fixing prices of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and plasticizers, key chemical additives used in PVC production." LG Chem and Hanwha Solutions are the two domestic suppliers of PVC; all four firms produce plasticizers, the softening additives used to make rigid PVC flexible.
The regulator declined to elaborate. "An FTC official declined to comment, saying the agency does not provide details on individual cases," the Korea Times reported, a line echoed in Korean by Chosun Biz: "개별 사건에 대해 확인해 줄 수 없다" ("we cannot confirm details on individual cases").
The specific theory under examination, per Chosun Biz and Asiae, is whether the producers used disruptions to naphtha — the petrochemical feedstock most exposed to Middle East energy flows — as a pretext to align price increases on downstream PVC and plasticizers. Yonhap framed the focus as PVC and plasticizer collusion "amid growing concerns over rising consumer prices in the wake of the Middle East crisis," while Asiae explicitly tied the alleged coordination to "naphtha supply constraints stemming from the Iran war."
Why It Matters
This is the first concrete signal that Seoul intends to police how Korea's petrochemical complex passes through the Middle East supply shock to downstream buyers. Naphtha-linked feedstock pain has been an industry-wide narrative since the spring; the KFTC's move challenges the consensus that those cost increases will simply flow through to PVC and plasticizer customers without scrutiny. By targeting the same four companies that dominate Korean PVC and plasticizer output, the regulator is extending the same on-site investigation playbook it has used in other 2026 consumer-price probes — including its previously reported moves against domestic flour millers and paint manufacturers. For LG Chem and Hanwha Solutions in particular, the probe arrives just as both companies have been pointing to widening PVC spreads as a long-awaited margin recovery story.
Business Impact
The immediate business impact is narrow but real. KFTC dawn raids in Korea typically precede a multi-month evidence review before any formal charges or fines are issued, so there is no near-term enforcement action attached to Thursday's visit. None of the four companies have been formally accused of wrongdoing. However, the very existence of a record seizure tied to PVC and plasticizers — segments that sit inside the petrochemical divisions of LG Chem and Hanwha Solutions — adds an overhang to two profit centers the market has been tracking closely. Aekyung Chemical, which KED Global reported expanded its plasticizer business via the December 2023 acquisition of LG Chem's Vietnam plasticizer subsidiary VPCHEM, is now under regulatory scrutiny for the same product line it has been scaling. OCI, the smallest of the four in PVC but a producer of plasticizers, also lands inside the probe perimeter.
Industry & Historical Context
Korea is one of Asia's largest PVC exporters, with Hanwha Solutions tracing its PVC franchise back to 1966, when, per the company's Chemical Division at-a-glance materials, it produced the country's first PVC resin. Korean producers including LG Chem, Hanwha Solutions and Aekyung Chemical are among the major plasticizer suppliers in Asia. Plasticizers — chemical additives that soften PVC for use in flooring, wire jackets and medical tubing — sit at the intersection of consumer prices and global oil-linked feedstocks, which is why KFTC investigations into the segment tend to attract political attention. Heraldgyeongje framed the probe as part of the KFTC's broader 2026 push to scrutinize price hikes on 'essential, consumer-oriented items,' particularly where companies may have used rising raw material costs as cover for collusion.
What to Watch
- Whether the KFTC issues a formal examiner's report (심사보고서) in the coming quarters, which would signal the agency believes it has evidence sufficient to seek penalties.
- Any disclosures from LG Chem or Hanwha Solutions on DART (Korea's electronic disclosure system) acknowledging receipt of an on-site investigation — a standard listed-issuer practice in Korea.
- Whether the probe widens to additional downstream petrochemicals exposed to the same naphtha cost story.
- Public commentary from MOTIE (Korea's Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy) on petrochemical price pass-through, which would indicate political alignment behind the KFTC's action.
Sources: - Yonhap News Agency — https://www.yna.co.kr/view/AKR20260514116751002 - The Korea Times — https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/business/companies/20260514/antitrust-watchdog-probes-4-petrochemical-firms-over-alleged-price-fixing - Chosun Biz — https://biz.chosun.com/policy/policy_sub/2026/05/14/QMUU7VEVDJAQBBA46YRRRG47IM/ - Asiae — https://www.asiae.co.kr/article/2026051415175668711 - Heraldgyeongje — https://biz.heraldcorp.com/article/10738081 - KED Global (Aekyung/VPCHEM background) — https://www.kedglobal.com/chemical-industry/newsView/ked202312220007
By LineVest Markets Desk — May 14, 2026
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.



