Korean consumers keep buying Chinese cars
Chinese cars are popular in South Korea despite a near boycott of Korean brands in China

By Jhoo Dong-chan
The Kenbo 600 SUV, the first Chinese passenger car on sale in South Korea, is enjoying major popularity, a stark contrast to Korean carmakers’ struggles in China due to the soured relationship between the two nations caused by a U.S. anti-missile shield.
After Korea decided to deploy a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) battery, China came up with various economic retaliatory measures. Along the same line, Chinese consumers have virtually boycotted Korean automotive brands like Hyundai and Kia.
However, Korean motorists seemingly decided not to reciprocate as amply demonstrated by the rising sales of the Chinese SUV.
In order to meet the surging demands, China-Korea Motor, the local importer of the Chinese midsize SUV, plans to import 320 more cars from China by the end of June.
A China-Korea Motor official said the first batch of 120 cars was sold out two weeks after the Kenbo 600 SUV hit the Korean market in January. The Chinese carmaker’s local sales unit immediately imported more but demand outstripped supply.
China-Korea Motor decided to increase the volume of its monthly imports by almost 60 percent beginning in June.