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Follow the Cash: When Raised Capital Doesn't Move

Raising capital is the easy part of a press release to celebrate. What rarely makes the headline is the quieter, more revealing fact: where the money goes next. This month, two companies on opposite sides of the world offered an unusually clean look at that question — and at why the destination of cash, not its arrival, is the real governance signal. In the United States, Fair Isaac Corporation (FICO) amended its credit agreement in early June to add a $1.5 billion unsecured term loan maturing in 2028, then used the proceeds to fund an accelerated share repurchase under a newly authorized $2 billion buyback program. This was not surplus cash being returned; it was new debt raised specifically to retire shares. In Korea, KOSDAQ-listed Agent AI disclosed on June 19 a ₩1.5 billion convertible-bond issue whose entire proceeds are earmarked to redeem, ahead of maturity, an earlier ₩1.5 billion CB — one held by Sangsangin Savings Bank (₩1.0 billion) and Sangsangin Plus Savings Bank (₩0.5 bi...

The Capital Efficiency Signal: When ROIC Stops Making Sense

Over the past ten years, Korea's benchmark KOSPI index climbed roughly 370%. Over the same decade, the share price of S-1 Corp — a profitable, cash-rich Samsung-affiliated security company — fell about 30%. That gap is not a rounding error. It is a 400-percentage-point divergence between a market and one of its supposedly defensive blue chips, and this week it became the center of one of the first major activist tests under Korea's revised Commercial Act. On June 24, 2026, Flashlight Capital Partners (FCP) — an activist fund founded by a former head of KKR Korea — went public with a campaign against S-1. FCP, holding over 1% of the company, laid out five demands ahead of the October annual meeting: a three-year target price, a five-year business vision, a concrete plan for excess cash, more transparent communication with shareholders, and a board run in the spirit of the new fiduciary-duty rules. The financial core of the complaint is blunt: S-1 holds cash equal to roughly hal...

This Week's Risk Radar: What RaymondsIndex Is Watching

The week opens with a textbook red-zone case. On June 25, Nasdaq suspended trading in Aditxt (ADTX) after its Hearings Panel, two days earlier, denied the company's request to remain listed. The cited reasons read like a checklist of late-stage distress: a stockholders' equity deficit of −$35.17 million against a $2.5 million minimum, a bid price under $1.00 for 30 straight business days, and — most tellingly — seven reverse stock splits with a cumulative ratio above 250-to-1 that still failed to restore compliance. The company was burning roughly $5 million a quarter. What makes this a Weekly Risk Radar story is not the failure itself. It is the shape of the failure. Aditxt did not collapse in a single event. It drained, quarter after quarter, while corporate machinery — repeated reverse splits, dilutive financings, a proposed $150 million SPAC deal — kept the listing technically alive long after the economics had hollowed out. And the people structurally positioned to absor...

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...

When the Network Becomes Destiny: How This Week's AI Capital Concentration Reveals the Hub Collapse Pattern

This week the AI economy quietly tightened its own wiring. NVIDIA disclosed that it has committed more than $40 billion in 2026 alone to equity stakes across its own supply chain — roughly $2.1 billion into data-center operator Iren, $3.2 billion into glassmaker Corning, and over $6.5 billion into photonics since March — a strategy that controls supply and demand simultaneously so that the entire chain runs on NVIDIA hardware. At the same time, the four hyperscalers (Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta) are channeling roughly $725 billion of capex into the same bet, a 77% jump year over year, while Meta's free cash flow is projected to collapse nearly 80%, from $43.6 billion to $8.5 billion. The pattern is Hub Collapse. In the classic version, a megahub flips to cash-cow mode — cutting capex, expanding buybacks — and its connected nodes take a simultaneous shock. What we are seeing now is the mirror image: not retreat, but hyper-concentration. When roughly five nodes carry the load...

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

On June 23, 2026, the KOSPI fell 9.99% — its largest point decline on record. Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix each dropped more than 12%, circuit breakers halted trading twice in a single session, and roughly ₩742.76 trillion in market value evaporated. The headline reads like a sudden shock. The order flow tells a different story. The crash was a flow, not a surprise Foreign investors sold ₩4.14 trillion on the day; domestic institutions sold ₩4.53 trillion. Only 46 KOSPI stocks rose against 859 that fell. The selling didn't follow the plunge — it was the plunge. The stated trigger was a regulatory signal that the chip rally had become overheated. Foreign capital, which holds north of 35% of KOSPI200, read that signal and moved. Retail investors — structurally last in line for information — were left buying a falling knife. This is the asymmetry that defines Capitalism 4.0. The party with the most information bears the least risk; the party with the least information bears th...

The Zombie Pattern: How Distressed Companies Drain Before They Fall

A company almost never dies the way a headline suggests — suddenly, on a single bad day. It drains. Slowly. Capital that should rebuild the business is redirected: to buybacks, to dividends, to debt that gets rolled rather than repaid, and sometimes straight up the ownership chain to the people who control it. By the time "distress" appears in the financial statements, the extraction has usually been running for years. This week offered the pattern in two very different forms. The macro version. Aswath Damodaran's latest 2026 data update on dividends and buybacks lays out an uncomfortable arithmetic. In 2025, U.S. companies generated roughly $1.66 trillion in free cash flow to equity — yet returned about $4.1 trillion to shareholders ($2.55T in dividends, $1.53T in buybacks). In 2026, S&P 500 buybacks are again on pace to exceed a trillion dollars, outrunning dividends. Returning more than you produce is not automatically reckless; mature firms with few good projec...