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...