April 18, 2024

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Daniel Tudor

Daniel Tudor

Daniel Tudor is a writer, entrepreneur and former journalist from Manchester, U.K. After a short stint working in finance, he served as Korea Correspondent for The Economist from 2010-2013, where he reported extensively on North and South Korea. During this time he also published his first book, Korea: The Impossible Country, an introduction to South Korea for an international audience. He co-founded The Booth Brewing Company, Korea's first venture-funded craft beer firm, in 2013. Following that he returned to the UK and was involved in the early stages of web novel startup Radish Fiction, whilst also writing 'North Korea Confidential', a book which ultimately earned him threats from the Pyongyang regime (but very little in the way of royalties). Between 2017 and 2018 Daniel worked as an advisor on the international press to the Moon Jae-in administration, and then set up Kokkiri, Korea's most popular meditation app, in 2019. He is a graduate of Oxford University (PPE) and Manchester University (MBA).

Analysis

How the power dynamics of South Korean finance distort stock value forecasts

Most ROK analysts shun negative ratings, producing overly optimistic forecasts that can lead investors astray

Daniel TudorDaniel TudorJanuary 4, 2023
Analysis

South Korean banks are wildly undervalued. Foreign investors should take a look.

Government oversight limits growth but improved capitalization has left banks better prepared for economic shocks

Daniel TudorDaniel TudorOctober 26, 2022
Analysis

How foreign firms thrive in South Korea’s startup ecosystem

Lower labor costs, highly skilled workforce create opportunities for success — if you know where to look

Daniel TudorDaniel TudorJuly 6, 2022
Analysis

Capitalism with South Korean characteristics

'Preferred Stocks' offer attractive yields for short- to medium-term investors — and bigger payoffs in the long term

Daniel TudorDaniel TudorMay 17, 2022