The Hidden Clock in Private Equity Exits: What KFC Korea and Japan's Bond Boom Tell Us About M&A Readiness
Private equity's relationship with time is rarely discussed honestly. This week, two signals emerged from Asian deal markets that deserve to be read together. Orchestra Private Equity completed the sale of KFC Korea to The Carlyle Group for approximately ₩200 billion ($135 million) — exiting roughly three years after acquisition. In Korea's PE ecosystem, a clean three-year exit is a mark of execution discipline. It implies a thesis that held, a portfolio company that was prepared, and a buyer who arrived with conviction. Across the Japan Strait, something less visible but equally significant is happening. Japan's corporate bond market just posted a record: ¥15.8 trillion ($99 billion) in yen-denominated bond issuance in the fiscal year ended March 2026, up 5% year-on-year and the highest on record. In March alone, issuance surged 94% compared to the same period last year — more than four times faster than global corporate bond markets combined. The primary driver, acc...