What Individual Investors Don't See Until It's Too Late
There is a quiet admission buried inside two regulatory updates this week — one in Seoul, one in Washington — and it changes how we should think about risk. Start with Korea. The Financial Supervisory Service set its 2026 audit-oversight direction around a single phrase: zero tolerance for accounting fraud. The mechanism is notable. Penalties no longer stop at the executive who signs off on a fraudulent statement; they now reach the person who directed it, with bans of up to five years from serving as an officer of any listed company. In parallel, the Korea Exchange is running an intensive delisting-management period from February 2026 through June 2027, and listing-maintenance thresholds are being ratcheted upward — toward 100 billion won in sales and 300 billion won in market cap by 2029. The message to weak issuers is blunt: shape up or exit. Now Washington. The SEC's 2026 enforcement priorities read predictably — offering fraud aimed at retail investors, accounting fraud, mark...