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When the Network Becomes Destiny: How This Week's Naver–Dunamu Deal Reveals the Ecosystem Encirclement Pattern

This week, Naver Financial moved to make Dunamu — the company behind Upbit, Korea's largest crypto exchange — a wholly owned subsidiary in a roughly $10.3 billion all-stock deal. The exchange ratio was fixed at one Dunamu share to 2.54 Naver Financial shares, with the stock-swap effective date set for June 30. The Korea Fair Trade Commission's combination review has stretched out, and domestic securities firms have begun warning openly about platform monopoly. On the surface this is a fintech consolidation story. Underneath, it is a textbook case of what we call Ecosystem Encirclement . The concept. In Capitalism 4.0, risk stops belonging to individual firms and assets and starts belonging to the topology of the network — the shape of the relationships between firms, capital, and people. Ecosystem Encirclement is one of five paths by which relational risk becomes real. It describes a multi-domain platform whose cross-subsidies neutralize the unit economics of any single-domai...

What Individual Investors Don't See Until It's Too Late

Every disclosure has a before. Before the 8-K, before the press release, before the financial statements confirm anything, there is a window in which a small number of people already know — and a far larger number do not. That window is where information asymmetry lives, and it is almost never the retail investor who stands on the favorable side of it. Consider the SEC's June 5, 2026 complaint against a former analyst at a healthcare-focused investment adviser. The firm had been "wall-crossed" on client matters — granted confidential access to upcoming securities offerings, private placement terms, and clinical drug trial results. According to the SEC, the analyst allegedly used that access to trade ahead of public disclosure across at least 12 healthcare companies from February 2024 through October 2025, buying when the undisclosed news was favorable and selling short when it was not, for more than $320,000 in profit. A parallel criminal action followed. The mechanics ar...

The Zombie Pattern: How Distressed Companies Drain Before They Fall

This week offered two reminders, on two continents, that companies rarely die in a single event. They wind down — and the winding down is visible long before the final notice. In Korea, a KOSDAQ-listed company called TS NEXGEN entered the last week of its life as a public stock. An external auditor issued a qualified opinion citing a scope limitation, triggering a delisting process; the shares moved into an orderly-liquidation window from June 10, with the final delisting set for June 19. The orderly-liquidation period is, in practice, the last exit for minority holders — a door that opens precisely when most of the value has already gone. In China, the developer Vanke — once a national flagship — spent the same week negotiating a 30-trading-day grace period on a 2 billion yuan bond. A proposed 12-month deferral had drawn approval from only 20.2% of holders. S&P Global already classifies the company as in selective default; Moody's has cut it to Ca. Roughly 94 billion yuan of...

Follow the Cash: When Raised Capital Doesn't Move

There were two capital decisions worth holding side by side this week, and they pointed in opposite directions. In California, the board of CVB Financial authorized a buyback of up to 15 million shares — a clean signal that the institution intends to push capital back toward its shareholders rather than into new lending or growth. On the same calendar, a KOSDAQ-listed robotics-gear maker, Haesung Aerobotics, resolved to raise ₩20 billion in private convertible bonds, splitting the proceeds into ₩10 billion for facilities, ₩6 billion for operations, and ₩4 billion to "acquire the securities of another company." The target of that last tranche has not been disclosed. One company is sending cash out to owners. The other is pulling cash in, with a fifth of it pointed at an acquisition it has not yet named. The motions are opposite, but they converge on a single discipline that most investors underweight: cash governance. The concept. Cash governance is not a question of how m...

The Capital Efficiency Signal: When ROIC Stops Making Sense

This month, Japan's regulators did something quietly radical. The Corporate Governance Code revision — the first in six years — will require listed companies to demonstrate that they are actually using their cash rather than stockpiling it. The number behind the reform is staggering: roughly $840 billion in idle cash, the highest cash-to-market-cap ratio in the developed world. In FY2025/26, Japanese firms returned just 37.6% of earnings as dividends, against an international average of 54.3%. The capital exists. It simply isn't moving. That phrase — capital that isn't moving — is the entire premise of capital efficiency analysis. Return on invested capital (ROIC) is supposed to tell you how well a company turns money into more money. But ROIC is a backward-looking ratio. By the time it visibly deteriorates, the underlying behavior has been in place for several reporting periods. The more revealing question is not "what is the return?" but "where is the cap...

This Week's Risk Radar: What RaymondsIndex Is Watching

The week opened with two reminders that distress is rarely sudden. In Seoul, the Financial Services Commission's delisting reform takes effect on July 1 — and the Korea Exchange's own simulations now estimate that roughly 150 KOSDAQ companies (with some projections reaching 220) could face delisting this year, far above the 50 first anticipated. The market-cap requirement rises to ₩20bn on July 1, a new "penny-stock" trigger is added, a half-year full-capital-impairment criterion is introduced, and disclosure-violation standards are tightened. In the United States, Salesforce offered a different version of the same story: a fresh round of layoffs, a $50B buyback supporting earnings per share, and the acquisition of usage-based billing platform m3ter — capital returning to shareholders even as the headcount that produces it comes down. These look like unrelated headlines. Through the lens of relational risk, they rhyme. Zone D, Zone C, and the Weekly Pulse. Raymonds...

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...