



The company escaped the supervision list in 2015 by recording profits in 2014 but returned to the red in 2016. The downbeat trend consequently pushed conglomerates out of the wind energy sector, with Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering retreating in 2015 and Hyundai Heavy Industries and Samsung Heavy Industries following suit in the following year.Īfter four consecutive years of operating deficit in 2010-2013, Unison was placed under supervision by the Korea Exchange in 2014, a preliminary procedure before delistment. The global economic crisis in 2008 also weighed on the momentum of the policy. The green growth initiative, however, soon dwindled amid criticisms that the affiliated constructions were rather damaging to the environment, instead of lowering carbon emissions. Throughout 2016, shares of Unison never closed above 2,000 won.ĭriven by the “green growth” slogan under the former Lee Myung-bak administration, many companies including conglomerates rushed to the wind power business in 2008 and in the years that followed.Ī leader in the industry with original technologies to build, operate and control wind turbines, Unison saw a 223 percent rise in stock prices from late 2007 to early 2008. In response to the financial authorities’ inquiry on the sudden rise, Unison said that there was no conspicuous factor.ĭuring the cited period, Unison peaked at 5,270 won, the highest in over four years since May 2013, while putting its closing mark at 4,970 won on July 27, the highest since June 2013. The increase rate of Unison shares was the third-sharpest among over 1,200 Kosdaq-listed firms, having surged 137.2 percent to 4,400 won ($3.91) as of Friday from 1,855 won 60 trading days ago. It was in May - when the new president took office after a snap election - when Unison started to show stellar performance in the second-tier Kosdaq market. Over the past three years, the company has built 59 out of the 212 wind turbines here but still faced operating losses and weak performance in the stock market. Moon‘s move to increase the role of new and renewable energy sources is bringing attention back to Unison, the leading provider of land-based wind farms in South Korea. South Korea is witnessing a revival in eco-friendly policy on the back of President Moon Jae-in’s promise of a “paradigm shift to a safer Republic of Korea” in terms of its energy supply.
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This is the 39th in a series of articles analyzing major companies traded on the tech-heavy Kosdaq market.
