Skip advert
Advertisement

‘Truth is, Samsung, LG Chem and other Korean firms are merely warming up’

This week Mike Rutherford talks about the rise of Korean car manufacturers

Hyundai Kona opinion

On the eve of 1988’s scorching Summer Olympic Games in Seoul, we Brits could have bought any Korean car we liked; as long as it was a Hyundai, often featuring a nasty blue interior and an even nastier pea green paintjob. Rightly, we didn’t queue to buy ’em. 

Wind forward three decades and during this, the first week of the Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, just up the icy mountain road from Seoul, and Hyundais are selling big time to UK consumers. As are Kias. And with SsangYong SUVs also in the mix, the Koreans will again shift around 200,000 cars to Brits this year. Not bad. But nowhere near good enough for a still ambitious, if tiny, north east Asian country that already builds about the same number of cars annually (3.9 million) as the wobbly, considerably larger USA. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

Winter car checklist: driving kit and best buys

Truth is, the Koreans are merely warming up when it comes to this car building lark. The above established marques will continue to do their thing. But there’s no reason why automotive brands from the recent past including Panther (sports cars), Asia Motors (great little SUVs) and Daewoo (cheap urban family runabouts) can’t and won’t return to or make their debuts in UK sales outlets. Oullim and Proto are others with potential. 

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Smaller, intriguing, even lesser known marques are too numerous to mention and wait in the wings. Mighty Samsung Motors may appear to be an insignificant automotive player at present. But it’s just helped the Renault-Nissan family it is part of to become the top-selling car manufacturer on earth. And just as Hyundai wisely broke away from Mercedes and Kia split from Ford/Mazda, don’t rule out Samsung going it alone as a builder of premium part or pure-electric vehicles that’ll pair with your Samsung phone, computer or entertainment systems. 

Also, nothing would delight a powerfully mischievous Samsung more than to tread on the sensitive automotive toes of Hyundai, because they are bitter rivals and there’s bad blood between the two clans. But the dark horse that is LG Chem could yet emerge as the cleverest and most significant Korean firm on the global EV stage. How come? It’s already the world’s number one supplier of rechargeable battery packs for vehicle manufacturers. 

And it’s no exaggeration to say that without LG Chem, there would be no Ford Focus Electric, Renault ZOE/Fluence/Twizy, Chevrolet Bolt/Spark, Hyundai Ioniq and countless other pure or part-electric cars from the likes of Audi, Volvo, Cadillac and Kia. Not so little and not so old LG Chem is probably the greatest automotive firm you’ve never heard of. Ignore it at your peril.

Korean cars may be selling well the world over, but did they pick up any awards in the Auto Express New Car Awards this year? Click here to find out.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Chief columnist

Mike was one of the founding fathers of Auto Express in 1988. He's been motoring editor on four tabloid newspapers - London Evening News, The Sun, News of the World & Daily Mirror. He was also a weekly columnist on the Daily Telegraph, The Independent and The Sunday Times. 

Find a car with the experts

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Kia Tasman pick up set for radical overhaul after reveal of new Weekender Concept
Auto Express senior staff writer Jordan Katsianis standing next to the Kia Tasman Weekender

Kia Tasman pick up set for radical overhaul after reveal of new Weekender Concept

Production Tasman was widely panned, but latest pick-up is a whole lot cooler, with a hint of Ford Ranger Raptor to it
News
23 Apr 2025
What is Hyundai N? Past, present and future of the Korean performance brand
Auto Express consumer reporter Tom Jervis standing next to a Hyundai N racing car

What is Hyundai N? Past, present and future of the Korean performance brand

We follow Hyundai's N brand from Namyang to the Nurburgring
Features
10 Apr 2025
Kia PV7 and PV9 up next in brand's electric van onslaught
Kia PV5 - MPV above

Kia PV7 and PV9 up next in brand's electric van onslaught

Funky-looking Kia PV5 will receive two larger siblings in 2027 and 2029
News
9 Apr 2025
Best new cars coming soon: all the big new car launches due in 2025, 2026 and beyond
Best new cars coming soon - header image

Best new cars coming soon: all the big new car launches due in 2025, 2026 and beyond

These are the most important new cars headed our way, from brands including Audi, BMW, Dacia, Ferrari, Ford, Skoda and more
Best cars & vans
8 Apr 2025

Most Popular

Chinese cars can’t match their European rivals when it comes to engineering
Opinion - Shanghai Auto Show

Chinese cars can’t match their European rivals when it comes to engineering

This new brand of cars might have battery tech on their side, but European buyers want much more than that
Opinion
25 Apr 2025
Leapmotor B05 family hatch on route to the UK with sub-£30k price and 400-mile range
Leapmotor badge

Leapmotor B05 family hatch on route to the UK with sub-£30k price and 400-mile range

The Stellantis-backed brand will launch a Volkswagen ID.3-rivalling small car with almost 20 per cent more range
News
23 Apr 2025
Buying a modern used car for under £10k is almost impossible
Opinion - £10k used cars

Buying a modern used car for under £10k is almost impossible

Phil McNamara discovers that it’s harder than ever to find a good-value car at the affordable end of the market
Opinion
24 Apr 2025