Decoding RaymondsIndex: The Four Signals That Move Before the Balance Sheet
Every distress story has the same problem: by the time the financial statements show it, the people who needed to know already knew. The balance sheet is a confession written after the fact. RaymondsIndex was built on the opposite premise — that the relationships around a company move first, and that those movements can be measured. This week offered a clean, ordinary example. A KOSDAQ-listed entertainment company approved a ₩15 billion third-party-allocation rights offering, with the new shares routed to a single investment partnership and payment scheduled for the end of July. Nothing here is illegal or even unusual. Third-party placements are a routine financing tool. But they are also the exact moment where one question becomes urgent: capital is arriving — where will it actually go? "Raised" and "deployed" are two separate facts, and the distance between them is where relational risk lives. That distance is what the four indices measure. CEI — Capital Effici...