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PE Take-Privates in Asia: Why Seoul and Tokyo Are Delisting in 2026

Two deals announced in the same week of April 2026 tell a story that goes beyond individual transactions. In Seoul, private equity firm Hahn & Company completed its exit from KCar — Korea's largest direct used-car platform — selling a 72.19% stake to industrial conglomerate KG Group for ₩550 billion, with Cactus PE acquiring the affiliated financing arm KCar Capital for an additional ₩200 billion. The total exit package reached ₩750 billion (approximately $545 million). Hahn had originally acquired the business in 2018 from SK Encar's direct sales division for roughly ₩220 billion. In Tokyo, KKR & Co. announced a ¥528.56 billion ($3.3 billion) tender offer for Taiyo Holdings, the world's leading producer of solder resist ink used in printed circuit boards. The offer price of ¥4,750 per share represented a 117% premium to the six-month volume-weighted average. Taiyo's board of directors unanimously supported the bid. Its largest shareholder, DIC Corporation, th...

The Accountability Imperative: How Activist Shareholders and PE Buyouts Are Rewriting Corporate Governance in 2026

When Traditional Finance Buys Crypto: The PMI Risks Nobody Prices

Today, Mirae Asset Consulting formally disclosed its acquisition of a 92.06% stake in Korbit — South Korea's fourth-largest cryptocurrency exchange — for approximately ₩133.5 billion ($96 million). The announcement came the same morning Goldman Sachs reported Q1 2026 earnings amid a record-breaking global M&A quarter: $1.2 trillion in deals, up 42% from Q1 2025 (FinancialContent/MarketMinute, April 9, 2026). The juxtaposition is instructive. Wall Street's "fee machine" is roaring back to life. In Korea, a traditional financial conglomerate has crossed a sector boundary most would have called impassable eighteen months ago. These are not separate stories — they are the same story told in two currencies. The Structural Arbitrage Mirae Asset's acquisition structure is notable for what it reveals. The buyer of record is not a bank, an insurance company, or a securities firm — it is Mirae Asset Consulting, a non-financial affiliate. This design was deliberate...

When Winning Isn't Enough: Edinburgh Worldwide, Bain Capital Korea, and the Structural Logic of Relational Risk

■ The Edinburgh Paradox Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust (EWI), managed by Baillie Gifford, has defeated Saba Capital Management at the ballot box twice. In January 2026, 53.2% of shareholders voted to retain the incumbent board, and over 90% of non-Saba shareholders rejected Saba's nominees. Yet in April 2026, EWI's board is proposing a 100% exit tender offer — effectively winding down a 28-year-old institution. The board has warned there is a "high probability" that Saba wins control at the April 30 AGM. How does a twice-defeated activist maintain the ability to threaten corporate dissolution? The answer is structural, not transactional. ■ Relational Architecture, Not Vote Counts Saba Capital holds 31% of EWI's shares. That is not a financial position — it is a persistent structural presence in the governance network. No individual vote can neutralize the permanent relational authority of a 31% block. Every resolution, every strategy, every board appointment...

CVC's Recordati $12.7 billion Mega LBO

  Review of Private Equity, Pharmaceutical, Infrastructure Privatization, and Relationship Risks CVC's Recordati $12.7 billion Mega LBO Relational Risk Research Institute | Research Session | 2026-04-10 Participating Researchers: Warren (Economist) Sam (AI Specialist) Phill (Social Philosopher) Key figures $12.7bn CVC's acquisition of Recordati deal size Equity $6.4–7.0bn + Debt $5.7–6.3bn 6.7 times Debt / EBITDA Leverage Ratio Exceeding the safety zone standard of 4.5 times +34% Average drug price increase rate within 3 years after PE acquisition R&D investment decreased by an average of 18% during the same period. Deal Structure Overview item Number / Content Transaction volume $12.7bn (approximately 17.2 trillion won) Equity injection $6.4–7.0 billion (leverage ratio approx. 45–50%) debt financing $5.7~6.3bn EV / EBITDA multiple Approximately 14 times (based on EBITDA €900M) Debt / EBITDA 6.7x — Moody's Pharmaceuticals LBO exceeds safety zone (4.5x) Joint investor co...