Hanwha Group became the second-largest shareholder of Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI, 047810 KS) on Monday after its Aerospace unit purchased 3.02 million KAI shares for KRW 499.9 billion (USD 332 million), lifting the group's combined stake to 9.04%, according to disclosures reviewed by Korea Herald and Korea Times.
Hanwha Aerospace holds 6.5% directly, while Hanwha Systems accounts for 1.53% and Hanwha Aerospace USA contributes 1.01%. The purchases move Hanwha past the National Pension Service (8.20%) — now in third place — while the state-run Export-Import Bank of Korea retains the top position at 26.41%.
The group changed its KAI investment classification from "simple investment" to "management participation" in May, after crossing the 5% reporting threshold — a formal declaration of intent to influence strategic decisions rather than hold shares purely for financial return.
South Korea's Sole Complete Aircraft Maker
KAI, which closed Monday at KRW 154,900, is the only Korean company capable of developing and manufacturing complete aircraft. Its portfolio spans T-50 trainer jets, FA-50 light combat aircraft, the Korea Fighter eXperimental (KF-21) program, satellites, and airborne combat systems. The company has been the subject of privatisation discussions for years; government-linked entities collectively own just over 30% of the float.
Hanwha previously held a 5.99% stake in KAI in 2018 before selling down. Its return — and the reclassification to management participation — reignites speculation about eventual consolidation.
Vertical Integration Rationale
"Combining the two companies' capabilities and technologies can eliminate inefficiency and strengthen the competitiveness of the country's aerospace and aviation industry," Hanwha said in a statement. Industry observers frame the ambition more expansively, describing the group as building a "Korean SpaceX" — a vertically integrated chain linking launch vehicles, satellites, ground systems, and space services.
A Clear Escalation Path
Hanwha Aerospace's board has approved an additional KRW 500 billion investment that would lift its direct KAI stake to approximately 9.97%, pushing the group's combined ownership above 12% before year-end. At KAI's current share price and roughly 97.5 million shares outstanding, a 12% stake implies a holding worth approximately KRW 1.8 trillion (USD 1.2 billion) — a step toward what analysts describe as a controlling minority in a company where the government retains a blocking stake.
The sequence — 4.99% in March, 7.22% by late May, 9.04% now, and 12% targeted by December — underscores Hanwha's commitment to consolidating influence in Korea's defence and aerospace supply chain at a time when the government is expanding domestic weapons exports.
Sources: The Korea Herald · Korea Times · SE Daily · TradingView / Reuters



