Asia-Pacific markets mostly in red on Tuesday, following a downbeat session on Wall Street after President Donald Trump announced that tariffs on Canada and Mexico "will go forward" once the
US President Trumps proposed 25% tariffs on steel and aluminum imports could disrupt Asias trade landscape, with Vietnam and South Korea among the most affected, according to ING Group strategists. Vietnams steel
Tyler, The Creator 2025 'Chromakopia' tour Asia is set to be held from September 9, 2025, to September 20, 2025, in venues across the countries of Japan, South Korea, Thailand, and the Philippines.
Shares retreated Friday in Asia, with benchmarks in Japan, Hong Kong and South Korea falling more than 2% after Wall Street indexes fell sharply on doubts over the frenzy around
U.S. stocks rallied on Friday to close out their dreary February on a brighter note. The S&P 500 jumped 1.6% to trim its loss for the month, enough to make it the worst only since December instead of since April.
Wall Street is having a small rebound before the opening bell Friday but remains on track for another dismal week of losses as investors try to anticipate what President Donald Trump’s
South Korea's exports barely grew in February, missing market expectations, with demand in China hurt amid a global tariff war. Outbound shipments from Asia's fourth-largest economy stood at $52.60 billion,
South Korea's exports are estimated to have risen in February, a Reuters poll showed, but the return to growth was largely due to more working days in the month and economists said the country's trade momentum was weakening amid a global tariff war.
South Korea’s birth rate increased for the first time in nine years in 2024. Some 238,300 babies were born last year, an increase of 8,300 from a year earlier, South Korea’s statistics agency said on Wednesday.
Six others were injured when part of a highway construction site broke apart on Tuesday morning, officials said.
The number of babies born in South Korea has rebounded for the first time in nine years, welcome news for a country grappling with one of the the world’s most serious demographic crises