The Sacrifice Play: When One Company in a Portfolio Is Designed to Lose
In baseball, a sacrifice bunt is a strategic play. The batter gives up an out — deliberately — so another runner can advance. The team scores. The batter's statistics suffer. It is not failure. It is design. In corporate finance, the same logic applies. Not every company in a multi-asset portfolio is meant to generate returns for all stakeholders. Some are positioned to absorb losses, serve as debt warehouses, or fund exits for the controlling investor — while minority shareholders and institutional creditors absorb the downside. This is the sacrifice play. And Korea's Homeplus case is one of the most instructive recent examples. The Homeplus Timeline In 2015, MBK Partners — Korea's largest private equity firm — acquired Homeplus for approximately 7.2 trillion won, the largest PE deal in Korean history. Over the following decade, store assets were sold off in a series of sale-and-leaseback transactions, reportedly generating around 4 trillion won in proceeds. By Mar...