The world's seventh-largest container shipper sought court receivership in late August after its creditors led by a South Korean state bank halted further support, stranding $14 billion in cargo and sending waves through global trade networks.

"Hanjin Shipping lost the game of chicken played among large shippers," Hanjin Group chairman Cho Yang-ho told the hearing.

"As a private company, we felt the limit of participating in a dumping war and asked for support, but I failed to convince," Cho told lawmakers.

Hanjin Shipping is due to submit a rehabilitation plan to a Seoul court in December, although many in the industry expect the carrier to be liquidated in the largest-ever bankruptcy in an industry that has been battered in recent years by overcapacity and sluggish trade.

Cho said that after Korean Air Lines Co Ltd acquired a controlling stake in Hanjin Shipping in 2014, the group injected about 2 trillion won (1.41 billion pounds) and cut its debt-to-equity ratio to 800 percent from about 1,400 percent.

"But as foreign shippers that are supported by their governments by trillions and tens of trillions of won, flooded the market with low prices, we felt our limit," Cho said.

Hanjin's collapse led ports around the world to deny service to its ships as vendors refused to unload cargo for fear they would not be paid, while some ships were seized by creditors, forcing the group to inject extra money to pay for unloading, a process that is ongoing.

"What pains me the most is that due to the court receivership many ship crews are in the middle of international waters like orphans, and I am very sorry and pained to have created a logistics crisis, but we did everything we could," he said.

(Reporting by Joyce Lee; Writing by Tony Munroe)

By Joyce Lee

Stocks treated in this article : Korean Air Lines Co Ltd, Hanjin Shipping Co Ltd