Decoding RaymondsIndex: CGI and MAI, Explained Through Two June Filings
This week handed us two clean teaching cases — one from Seoul, one from Mumbai — for the two RaymondsIndex signals investors most often ignore until it's too late: Cash Governance (CGI) and Momentum Alignment (MAI). The Seoul case: where did the raised cash go? A KOSDAQ-listed materials company resolved to issue ₩10 billion of unsecured private-placement convertible bonds. The stated purpose was not capital expenditure, not R&D, not debt repayment — it was the acquisition of securities in other companies. Half of the issue, ₩5 billion, was subscribed by an investment entity identified as a related party of the firm's largest shareholder. Capital was raised from the market and routed, in part, back through the controlling network — into financial holdings rather than the operating business. This is precisely what CGI is designed to detect. Cash Governance asks a deceptively simple question: once a company raises money, does it actually reach the business? CGI weights idl...