
South Korea seeks mutually agreeable US trade package as Aug 1 tariff deadline looms
The package will include shipbuilding cooperation, a sector of high interest to US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, who discussed the matter with South Korea's Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan on Friday, it said in a statement.
Friday's meeting was a follow-up to a meeting on Thursday, where Lutnick and Kim reaffirmed their commitment to reach a trade deal by Aug 1, after a joint meeting of finance ministers and top trade envoys that had been scheduled for Friday was postponed.
South Korea, facing 25 per cent tariffs, is rushing to reach a trade deal with Washington, with National Security Adviser Wi Sung-lac visiting the US recently for high-level talks and Minister for Trade Yeo Han-koo also in the US for negotiations, as pressure grows on officials to clinch a deal that is no worse than Japan's that cut tariffs to 15 per cent.
South Korea's trade negotiations with the US have included non-tariff barriers in the agricultural and digital service sectors, but foreign exchange has not been part of trade talks beyond usual consultations, according to South Korean officials.
US President Donald Trump arrived in Scotland on Friday for bilateral talks with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Sunday, which could yield a trade deal with the European Union, after making a deal earlier this week with Japan and the Philippines.
Next week, US officials will hold a new round of trade talks with China in Sweden for an extension to a separate deadline of Aug 12 set between the two countries.
South Korea's Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol and Foreign Minister Cho Hyun will also hold meetings with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and State Secretary Marco Rubio, respectively, next week.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNA
27 minutes ago
- CNA
Asia First - Wed 30 Jul 2025
02:25:56 Min From the opening bell across markets in Southeast Asia and China, to the biggest business interviews and top financial stories, tune in to Asia First to kick-start your business day.


CNA
42 minutes ago
- CNA
Fintech Ramp valued at $22.5 billion in late-stage funding round
Ramp has secured a valuation of $22.5 billion in a late-stage round, it said on Wednesday, marking a nearly 41 per cent jump in just over a month as fintech funding rebounds after a years-long slump. The New York-based company — which offers corporate cards, payment services and expense management applications — raised $500 million in the latest funding round, led by investment firm ICONIQ, taking its total equity financing to $1.9 billion. Existing investors Founders Fund, GIC, Coatue and General Catalyst also participated in the fundraising. Ramp's valuation has climbed from $13 billion in March to $16 billion in June and to $22.5 billion now, indicating renewed investor interest in financial platforms that offer digital and artificial intelligence-based services. The company said it began generating cash flow earlier this year. "Ramp's spectacular ramp in such a short period is another indicator that the fintech ice age has thawed, especially for firms already printing cash and selling AI-flavored picks-and-shovels to CFOs," said Michael Ashley Schulman, chief investment officer at Running Point Capital. Earlier this month, the company launched its first set of AI agents, which help clients in flagging fraud, updating policies as well as reviewing and approving transactions. It said it aims to accelerate the rollout with the fresh capital. Industry leaders have hailed the transformative potential of AI agents, given their ability to automate complex business processes. Ramp has more specialized agents coming in the next year as it looks to reduce manual tasks faced by finance teams. "Pair positive cash flow with a credible AI story and your valuation can ramp fast," Schulman said. Founded in 2019, Ramp enables tens of billions in purchases annually. It caters to more than 40,000 companies, including commercial real estate firm CBRE, and defense technology company Anduril.


CNA
43 minutes ago
- CNA
Cloud server startup Oxide raises $100 million
SAN FRANCISCO :Cloud server builder Oxide Computer Company on Wednesday said it has raised $100 million in financing to help the company expand its manufacturing capabilities and get new products out the door faster. Oxide makes server systems and the software which supports them that are designed to allow businesses to build cloud computing within their own company walls, instead of renting access to cloud servers from the likes of Amazon's AWS, Google or Microsoft. The company's competitors include server systems made by Dell and HPE. Oxide designs its server racks from the ground up, and has made significant investments in developing the software necessary to run in-house cloud computing. The idea is to give customers a complete cloud server system with no additional software licenses needed, according to chief executive Steve Tuck. "We're huge believers in cloud computing. We just believe that you should have it everywhere, not just in a rental only construct from a handful of service providers," Tuck said in an interview with Reuters. The software component of the company's server system is crucial, Tuck said, because to solve problems with large businesses running server systems themselves requires both components, especially in areas such as security. Beyond building additional software features and components, Oxide plans to use the cash to expand its manufacturing, logistics and supply operations. The company's customers in recent months have begun asking for dozens or hundreds of the company's systems at once, according to Tuck, and Oxide needs to expand its ability to fulfill such orders. Thomas Tull's U.S. Innovative Technology Fund led the funding round. Oxide said that all prior investors participated in the series B funding round including Counterpart Ventures, Eclipse, Intel Capital, Rally Ventures and Riot Ventures. "(Oxide) is reaping the benefit of being incredibly contrarian, trying to do something incredibly challenging and being successful," Eclipse partner Seth Winterroth said in an interview with Reuters. "They moved from contrarian to consensus at the right moment," he said.