Follow the Cash: When Raised Capital Doesn't Move
Raising capital is the easy part of a press release to celebrate. What rarely makes the headline is the quieter, more revealing fact: where the money goes next. This month, two companies on opposite sides of the world offered an unusually clean look at that question — and at why the destination of cash, not its arrival, is the real governance signal. In the United States, Fair Isaac Corporation (FICO) amended its credit agreement in early June to add a $1.5 billion unsecured term loan maturing in 2028, then used the proceeds to fund an accelerated share repurchase under a newly authorized $2 billion buyback program. This was not surplus cash being returned; it was new debt raised specifically to retire shares. In Korea, KOSDAQ-listed Agent AI disclosed on June 19 a ₩1.5 billion convertible-bond issue whose entire proceeds are earmarked to redeem, ahead of maturity, an earlier ₩1.5 billion CB — one held by Sangsangin Savings Bank (₩1.0 billion) and Sangsangin Plus Savings Bank (₩0.5 bi...