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Hanwha Solutions' ₩2.4T Rights Offering: What the Governance Signals Said First

■ The Headline Surprised Markets. The Signals Didn't. On March 26, 2026, Hanwha Solutions announced a ₩2.4 trillion (~$1.7 billion) rights offering — one of the largest equity dilutions in Korea's recent corporate history. The stock plunged nearly 20% in a single session. Analysts were surprised. Retail investors were angry. Commentators questioned timing. But for anyone watching the relational layer of Hanwha Solutions' governance, the surprise was that anyone was surprised. ■ What Happened Before the Announcement Two days before the public disclosure, Hanwha Solutions amended its articles of incorporation — specifically expanding the board's authority to approve equity issuances without a prior shareholder vote. This is a textbook Governance Risk indicator: a structural change to internal decision-making rules that precedes a major capital event. The fuller picture: - Governance Risk signal: Articles of incorporation amended 48 hours pre-announcement - Funding R...

2026 Relational Risk Top 10 — March Week 4

This week's highest Relational Risk Score firms across KOSPI and KOSDAQ. Ranked by composite RRS, incorporating Governance Risk, Human Risk, and Funding Risk signals observed in public filings from March 17–26, 2026. Three structural shifts are driving this week's elevated risk readings: KOSDAQ delisting criteria tightened — market cap threshold raised to ₩15B (Jan 2026), rising to ₩20B in July. 220+ penny-stock firms now inside the danger zone. Audit season concentrated risk — KOSPI 14 firms and KOSDAQ 43 firms reported qualified or adverse audit opinions for FY2025. CB issuance patterns intensifying — related-party CB allocations and conversion overhangs signaling classic Funding Risk sequences. Rank Sector / Type Market Est. WP% RRS Zone Signal Key Risk Factor Trigger Event 1 Battery materials · Mid-cap KOSDAQ 91% D 6/6 Funding + Governance CEO's personal entity received new CB allocation; existing CB offloaded to SPC at below-market terms. Audit report...

Elliott in Japan, TSE Delisting Deadlines, and the Relational Risk Signal Every Korean Investor Needs to See

■ The Headline That Isn't Really About Japan On March 18, 2026, Mitsui OSK Lines shares surged 11% to a record high. The catalyst: Elliott Investment Management disclosed a "significant" stake in the Japanese shipping giant — its latest move in a Japan activism spree that already includes Kansai Electric Power (top-3 shareholder), Toyota Industries, Tokyo Gas, and Sumitomo Realty & Development. Meanwhile, data from Nikkei Asia shows that Japan recorded 56 activist campaigns in 2025 — the busiest year on record and nearly half of all activist activity globally outside the United States. In 2026, the Tokyo Stock Exchange takes the final step in its governance reform push: initiating delisting procedures for companies that failed to make meaningful improvements to capital efficiency and board independence. This is not a Japan story. It is a preview of what is happening across Asia — including Korea. ■ The Pattern Elliott Follows Elliott does not buy into a comp...

Korea's 2026 Delisting Acceleration: Why "Financially Sound" Companies Are Still at Risk

■ The Regulatory Storm Has Arrived Korea's Financial Services Commission has launched its most aggressive delisting campaign in a generation. The numbers are stark: Up to 150 KOSDAQ companies face forced exit under an accelerated review program running February 2026 to June 2027 Market cap thresholds surge from ₩4B to ₩15B (January 2026) and then ₩20B (July 2026) — a 5× increase in 18 months New mandatory tender offer rules: acquiring 25%+ of a listed company now triggers a mandatory public buyout covering up to 50%+1 share Commercial Code amendment (effective July 2026): controlling shareholders capped at 3% voting rights on audit committee elections, and all KOSPI-listed companies must file governance reports ■ The Financial Disclosure Blind Spot Standard analysis focuses on these regulatory triggers. But 20 years running M&A PMI transactions across Korea has taught me something investors consistently miss: companies don't fal...

Korea Zinc's Board Battle Exposes the Hidden Architecture of Relational Risk in Korean M&A

Keywords: Korean M&A, Relational Risk, cross-border investment Korea, Korea Zinc shareholder dispute, KONNECT Introduction: When Relationships Become the Risk On March 24, 2026, shareholders of Korea Zinc — one of the world's largest zinc smelters — gather to vote on whether Chairman Yun B. Choi retains his board seat. The coalition opposing him controls more than 41% of the vote. Global pension funds have weighed in. Korea's own National Pension Service has gone conspicuously silent. For most observers, this is a governance story. For KONNECT, it is something more precise: a live demonstration of Relational Risk — the category of investment risk that emerges not from financial deterioration, but from the fracturing of the human relationships that hold a company together. What Is Relational Risk? Raymond Park (박재준), founder of KONNECT and creator of the Relational Risk framework, spent 20 years leading M&A Post-Merger Integration (PMI) engagements across Kore...

Part 3 — Corporate Analysis Judgment with CEI + CGI

Part 3 — Simulating corporate analysis judgments with CEI + CGI ​ <Quadrant Matrix> ​ Area A (CEI high + CGI high) — Really good company Assets are efficient and funds raised are properly invested in the business. Suitable for long-term holding. ​ Zone B (CEI high + CGI low) — Outwardly superior company ← Most risky The financial statements are clean and asset efficiency is good, but money is not spent on business after issuing CB. The analyst report is also positive, but the CB interest play cycle has already begun. Immediate alert if CGI falls for three consecutive quarters. ​ Zone C (low CEI + high CGI) — Likely to be a company undergoing growth investment Cash is used properly in business, but efficiency is still low. This may be immediately after investment in factories and facilities. The criterion for judgment is whether CEI has improved after 12 months. ​ Zone D (low CEI + low CGI) — Immediate review If two things are bad at the same time, it is most likely not a coincide...