What's in this episode:
- Opener: China extends visa-free entry for 45 countries until end of 2026 (including Sweden).
- Highlights: KOSPI hits new ATH of 4212 points; Nio deliveries jump 93% YoY to 40,397 vehicles in October.
- Top Bit: K-pop Comeback:
- Cultural thaw agreed upon at the Xi-Lee summit in Gyeongju.
- South Korean entertainment stocks (SM, JYP, YG, Hybe) surged on the news.
- Xi reportedly instructed the Foreign Minister to explore a K-pop concert in Beijing.
- The ban started in 2016 due to the THAAD missile system deployment.
- Number of the Day: $92 Billion—The projected size of Asia’s private credit market by 2027 (up from $59B in 2024). Emerging Asia faces a $1.7 trillion USD infrastructure funding gap.
- Market Bit: Starbucks China Exit:
- Starbucks is selling 60% of its China business to Boyu Capital for $4 billion, valuing the JV at $13 billion.
- Starbucks’ market share in China dropped from 34% (2019) to 14% (2024).
- The move reflects the need for local leadership and agile pricing to compete with local rivals.
- Head of the Day: J.Y. Park (박진영): The JYP Entertainment founder was appointed as co-chair of the Committee for Cultural Exchange, a ministerial-equivalent position.
- Short News of the Day:
- Hong Kong opens crypto markets, allowing exchanges to connect local investors with global order books.
- Renault is in talks with Chinese manufacturers for joint production after Geely acquired a stake in its Brazilian unit.
- SK Group is focusing on AI efficiency, building a new semiconductor complex that will produce chips equivalent to 24 existing factories.
- South Korea and China extend their 400 billion CNY currency-swap deal for five years.
Full Stories: CNN, Reuters, Nikkei, CNBC, The Business Times, SCMP.
Career Bits: Jobs at TikTok, GCC, UBS, Agoda, Ericsson, Mintel, Dada Consultants, Porsche, HSBC, and AWS.
Subscribe to our newsletter at asiabits.com.