Follow the Cash: When Raised Capital Doesn't Move
There is a quiet moment in every corporate failure that almost no one outside the company can see. It happens long before the auditor's note, before the trading halt, before the headline. It is the moment cash stops moving toward the business — and starts moving somewhere else. This week offered two versions of that moment, on two continents. In Seoul, a major media group missed payment on roughly ₩20.6 billion of securitized borrowings on June 12. Within three days, five companies in the group — including the holding company at the top — had filed for court receivership, and banks found themselves exposed to an estimated ₩800 billion in loans and guarantees, with one affiliate's ₩137 billion bond hitting an event of default. In China, a NASDAQ- and Hong Kong-listed recruiting platform took the opposite-looking path: it pushed 2026 share buybacks past RMB 1.8 billion and pledged to return at least 50% of adjusted net income to shareholders every year for three years. These look...