The Zombie Pattern: How Distressed Companies Drain Before They Fall
Introduction: The Survival Trade In South Korea, KOSDAQ delistings tripled over two years: 8 companies were removed from the market in 2023, rising to 20 in 2024 and 38 in 2025, according to Korea Exchange data cited in the Seoul Economic Daily (May 10, 2026). Regulators responded by raising the minimum market capitalization threshold from ₩4 billion to ₩15 billion in January 2026, with another increase to ₩20 billion scheduled for July. The result? A wave of “defensive M&A.” Listed Korean small-cap companies are acquiring businesses with stable revenue — not to build strategic value, but to pass the listing threshold. Kespion (079190), a communications antenna firm, acquired MBTB, an acne patch specialist, for ₩2.1 billion in January. Kespion had recorded operating losses of ₩5.4 billion in 2024 and ₩2.7 billion in 2025. At the time of acquisition, MBTB itself was unprofitable. As of late May, Kespion’s market cap sits at approximately ₩22.1 billion — barely above the ₩20 billio...