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When the Network Becomes Destiny: How This Week's KOSDAQ Battery-Theme Fraud Reveals the Retailization Pattern

This week, prosecutors in Seoul indicted five people behind one of the cleaner illustrations of relational risk you will find. In 2023, the group acquired a struggling KOSDAQ-listed company through a debt-free takeover — no capital of their own, funded instead by private lenders charging 260% annual interest. They then announced what every theme-chasing investor wanted to hear: Chinese capital, entry into the secondary battery business, and an exclusive ten-year supply arrangement worth up to 6 trillion won. A 60-billion-won convertible bond issuance was disclosed with no realistic prospect of execution. The stock rose roughly 900% in a single month, from 3,545 to 29,450 won. Trading was halted; the company is now being delisted. About 15,000 retail shareholders were left holding the loss, while prosecutors say the group extracted 14.3 billion won from the company and pocketed 13.8 billion won in illicit gains through borrowed-name accounts. The fifth path: Retailization In Capitalis...

What Individual Investors Don't See Until It's Too Late

Two stories broke this week, in two different markets, and they are the same story. In Seoul, Korea's Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) imposed penalties totaling ₩1.08 billion on a KOSPI-listed broadcaster's disclosure officer and his father. The officer — the employee responsible for publishing the company's material information — learned of an upcoming strategic content partnership with a global OTT platform between October and December 2024, bought shares before the announcement, and passed the tip along. Their combined illicit gains: roughly ₩870 million. His short-swing trading profit of ₩510 million was separately returned to the company under the Capital Markets Act. In the United States, a securities class action was filed against Veritone, an AI software company, after it admitted that previously reported financial statements could no longer be relied upon. Revenue had been overstated and net losses understated through misapplied accounting — an error in val...

The Zombie Pattern: How Distressed Companies Drain Before They Fall

This week delivered two case studies in the same lesson, from opposite sides of the Pacific. In Seoul, the Securities and Futures Commission concluded its review of Korea Zinc and Young Poong — the two houses that spent years locked in one of Korea's most expensive corporate control battles. On June 10, the regulator sanctioned both. Young Poong, it found, omitted or understated massive provisions for soil and groundwater contamination around its Seokpo smelter — a legal cleanup obligation that simply never made it onto the balance sheet at full size. Korea Zinc understated losses from a private equity fund investment and failed to recognize impairments on overseas subsidiaries whose recoverable value had fallen well below book. Both companies face surcharges, three years of externally designated auditors, and recommendations to dismiss responsible executives. In Texas, Inotiv, Inc. — a Nasdaq-listed contract research organization — filed a prepackaged Chapter 11 on June 3. Its pat...

Follow the Cash: When Raised Capital Doesn't Move

This week offered two reminders that the most important number in a financing announcement is not how much was raised — it's where the money goes next. In Korea, the wind-power developer Unison disclosed a ₩32 billion convertible bond, settled on June 8. The headline read like growth: capital for offshore wind expansion. But the breakdown is where the signal lives. ₩8B was tagged for facilities (O&M vessels), ₩10.1B for operations (raw materials) — and ₩13.9B, the single largest slice at 43%, for "acquiring securities of other companies." In other words, nearly half of money raised against the company's own equity is slated to flow into other firms' shares, not into turbines or order books. In Germany, BioNTech showed the same question at a vastly different scale. The company holds roughly €16.8 billion in liquidity — a windfall from its pandemic years — and on June 8 began a buyback of up to $1 billion while targeting around €500 million in annual cost savi...

The Capital Efficiency Signal: When Profit Stops Coming From the Business

Last week gave us an almost perfect case study in why a profit number can mislead. On June 2, GameStop reported the highest quarterly net income in its history — $389.6M for Q1 fiscal 2026. A celebration, on the surface. Then the footnote: $268.4M of that profit was an unrealized gain on options contracts tied to CEO Ryan Cohen's ongoing, board-rejected bid to acquire eBay. Strip out the financial position, and the operating business produced a fraction of the headline. At the same time, the company closed the quarter holding roughly $9.7B in total cash and marketable securities — and the board authorized a fresh $2B buyback. This is the exact terrain the Capital Efficiency Index (CEI) is built to read. CEI — weighted 45% inside RaymondsIndex — measures whether a company's capital is actually being put to productive work: return on invested capital, asset turnover, and the gap between the cash a firm holds and the investment it actually makes. A low CEI score is not a moral v...

This Week's Risk Radar: What RaymondsIndex Is Watching

Every Monday, the radar asks one question: which companies are in the red zone — and what are they doing about it? This week, the answer in Korea is arithmetic, not strategy. The domestic signal: a 28x surge in price engineering. Korea's new delisting regime takes effect in July: any stock that closes below ₩1,000 for 30 consecutive trading days becomes a managed issue, and failure to recover triggers delisting. The corporate response has been immediate — and revealing. Reverse-split filings have reached 200 this year, against just 7 in the same period a year ago, a 28-fold increase. The number of sub-₩1,000 stocks dropped from 209 to 158 in a single month. On the KOSDAQ, 122 names remain below the line, 46 more hover in the ₩1,000–1,200 "ledge zone," and 45 of the penny stocks recorded zero trading volume on a recent session — meaning holders couldn't exit even if they wanted to. A reverse split merges shares to lift the price per share. A 5-to-1 merger multiplies...

Decoding RaymondsIndex: MAI — The Momentum Alignment Index Explained

This week delivered a textbook lesson in why reported results and market prices are two different languages. Broadcom announced record revenue, record operating profit, and record free cash flow, with Q2 AI semiconductor revenue of $10.8 billion growing 143% year over year. The stock fell roughly 15% anyway — because management reiterated, rather than raised, its $100 billion full-year AI revenue target. Investors were not reacting to the income statement. They were reacting to a momentum signal: the gap between how fast the story was supposed to accelerate and how fast management said it would. That gap is precisely what the fourth RaymondsIndex indicator is designed to measure. What MAI measures MAI — the Momentum Alignment Index — tracks the consistency between revenue growth and CAPEX growth. In a healthy company, the two move together: rising sales justify rising investment, and rising investment feeds future sales. When they decouple, something is being misrepresented. Revenue ac...