After
World War II,
Park In-chon began a
taxi service, based out of Geumnamno in
Seo-gu,
Gwangju. By the 1950s, operations had expanded to include bus and coach services, operating as Gwangju Passenger Service (today, Kumho Buslines). The company began
vertical integration in 1960 with the establishment of Samyang Tire, today
Kumho Tire. Facing a shortage of raw material, Kumho Synthetic Rubber (today
Kumho Petrochemical) was established in 1971. The group expanded considerably as the
Korean economy boomed, adding subsidiary companies in aviation, construction, culture, logistics, information technology, and tourism business sectors. It was the parent company of the entertainment company On-Media (along with
Tongyang Group and
Orion Group), until its acquisition by the CJ Group in 2010. Surviving the
1997 Asian financial crisis in a position of strength, it acquired several companies from cash-strapped competitors in the 2000s, including
Daewoo Engineering & Construction and Korea Express. These acquisitions were heavily
leveraged, leading to cash flow issues as the
2008 financial crisis began to impact the economy. The group was forced to sell off assets and begin a
debt workout program in late 2009 after an attempt to sell Daewoo E&C failed on the open market. In December 2015,
Kumho Petrochemical was spun off from Kumho Asiana Group in order to raise capital for the company's remaining subsidiaries. In an effort to restructure, the group sold its controlling 45 percent stake in Kumho Tire to Chinese tire company
Doublestar in July 2018. In April 2019, the company sold its controlling stake in
Asiana Airlines to help pay down mounting credit debt which eventually resulted to the
merger of Asiana with
Korean Air in 2024. On February 27, 2025, the Kumho Asiana Group was delisted from the list of large conglomerates by the
Fair Trade Commission. == Subsidiaries ==