KakaoBank (035720.KS), South Korea's largest internet-only bank by users, has hired a career Hyundai Motor Group M&A executive to lead its overseas expansion — a signal that the lender intends to graduate from minority stakes to hands-on global dealmaking.
Kim Woo-joo, a former executive vice president of Kia's Global Business Management Division, was appointed head of KakaoBank's global division, the bank announced on June 9, as reported by Chosun Biz and Asia Economy (Asiae). Kim spent roughly 30 years across Hyundai Motor Group and Kia directing global business operations and growth strategy, the bank said. His résumé is the point: he helped establish HMG Global, the automaker's U.S.-based investment holding company, and worked on Hyundai's acquisition of U.S. robotics maker Boston Dynamics, according to the company statement carried by both outlets and confirmed by The Korea Herald. "Kim is an expert with extensive experience in global M&A and investment-driven expansion," a KakaoBank representative said, calling him "the right fit to execute and accelerate KakaoBank's global projects."
Why a banker hires an automaker's dealmaker
The question for an investor isn't who Kim is — it's what his hire says about intent. Until now, KakaoBank's offshore footprint has been built largely on small equity tickets and know-how sharing rather than control. In Indonesia, it took a 10% stake in digital lender Superbank in 2023 alongside ride-hailing group Grab; Superbank has since grown to about 5 million customers and listed on the Indonesian stock market in December, according to Fintech News Hong Kong. In Mongolia, the bank's stated plan is narrower still — exporting its proprietary "KakaoBank Score" credit-evaluation model to local financial institutions, per The Korea Herald.
The Thailand move is the template Kim is presumably being hired to repeat and scale. In June 2025, a KakaoBank-SCBX consortium won one of Thailand's first virtual banking licenses — the first return of a Korean financial firm to the Thai market in 25 years, according to KED Global. KakaoBank starts with a 10% stake and has signaled a path to roughly 24.5%, which would make it the second-largest shareholder, with customer services targeted for the second half of 2026. The license news moved the stock: shares jumped about 14% to ₩32,050 (about USD21.00 at the current rate of roughly 1,527 won per dollar, as of June 8, 2026) on June 20, 2025, their best level in around three years, KED Global reported. Bringing in an executive who structured cross-border holding companies and a landmark robotics buyout points to ambitions beyond passive 10% checks.
Does KakaoBank have the firepower?
KakaoBank can fund ambition from a position of strength. It posted a record net profit of ₩480.3 billion (about USD315 million) in 2025, up 9.1% year over year, with non-interest income topping ₩1 trillion (about USD655 million) for the first time, according to Seoul Economic Daily. Its subscriber base reached 26.7 million at the end of 2025 with more than 20 million monthly active users, and deposits stood at ₩68.3 trillion (about USD44.7 billion), per Seoul Economic Daily; management has set a target of 30 million users. A domestic deposit franchise of that size gives the bank the balance sheet to write larger checks abroad than its current 10% stakes suggest.
There is precedent for Korean financial firms struggling to convert domestic scale into foreign returns — a generation of banks that expanded into Southeast Asia in the 2010s found that licenses and minority stakes did not automatically translate into profit. The contrast Kim's hire implies is between buying exposure and operating a business; his Hyundai work was about the latter.
What to watch
The near-term test is execution, not headcount. The clearest data point is the Thai joint venture's targeted second-half 2026 launch and whether KakaoBank actually steps up toward its signaled ~24.5% stake. Beyond that, watch the bank's next earnings release for any disclosed increase in overseas investment spending, and any new market announcement that moves past a 10% equity ticket toward a controlling or operating role — the shift Kim was hired to drive.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. All figures are sourced from the publications cited above; currency conversions use an approximate rate of 1,527 won per U.S. dollar as of June 8, 2026, and will vary.
Sources
- https://biz.chosun.com/stock/finance/2026/06/09/BVAZPD5VQRBHXCUUOMFRZB7O3M/
- https://view.asiae.co.kr/article/2026060919343834308
- https://www.koreaherald.com/article/10767664
- https://www.kedglobal.com/fintech/newsView/ked202506200003
- https://fintechnews.hk/36826/fintechkorea/kakaobank-indonesia-superbank-expansion/
- https://www.koreaherald.com/article/10712810
- https://en.sedaily.com/finance/2026/05/03/kakaobank-targets-30-million-users-via-ai-global-push



