The Zombie Pattern: How Distressed Companies Drain Before They Fall
This week offered two reminders, on two continents, that companies rarely die in a single event. They wind down — and the winding down is visible long before the final notice. In Korea, a KOSDAQ-listed company called TS NEXGEN entered the last week of its life as a public stock. An external auditor issued a qualified opinion citing a scope limitation, triggering a delisting process; the shares moved into an orderly-liquidation window from June 10, with the final delisting set for June 19. The orderly-liquidation period is, in practice, the last exit for minority holders — a door that opens precisely when most of the value has already gone. In China, the developer Vanke — once a national flagship — spent the same week negotiating a 30-trading-day grace period on a 2 billion yuan bond. A proposed 12-month deferral had drawn approval from only 20.2% of holders. S&P Global already classifies the company as in selective default; Moody's has cut it to Ca. Roughly 94 billion yuan of...