Follow the Cash: When Raised Capital Doesn't Move
This week offered two reminders that the most important number in a financing announcement is not how much was raised — it's where the money goes next. In Korea, the wind-power developer Unison disclosed a ₩32 billion convertible bond, settled on June 8. The headline read like growth: capital for offshore wind expansion. But the breakdown is where the signal lives. ₩8B was tagged for facilities (O&M vessels), ₩10.1B for operations (raw materials) — and ₩13.9B, the single largest slice at 43%, for "acquiring securities of other companies." In other words, nearly half of money raised against the company's own equity is slated to flow into other firms' shares, not into turbines or order books. In Germany, BioNTech showed the same question at a vastly different scale. The company holds roughly €16.8 billion in liquidity — a windfall from its pandemic years — and on June 8 began a buyback of up to $1 billion while targeting around €500 million in annual cost savi...