The Capital Efficiency Signal: When a Raise Circles Instead of Building
This week offered a clean illustration of a question that rarely makes headlines but decides shareholder outcomes: when a company raises capital, does that capital become a productive asset — or does it simply move around inside a network? A KOSDAQ-listed company priced a ₩22.5bn third-party allotment, subscribed entirely by its own largest shareholder. About ₩8bn of the proceeds repays a loan owed to that same shareholder; roughly ₩14.5bn buys additional shares of an affiliate, lifting the company's stake in that affiliate from 64.0% to 85.26%. The three entities involved already form a circular ownership loop — each is, directly or indirectly, a major shareholder of the next. New equity enters at one point in the circle and exits at another, without ever reaching a factory floor, a product line, or a new market. What capital efficiency actually measures. It is tempting to treat a capital raise as a growth signal. It isn't — not on its own. The relevant question is what the...