This Week's Risk Radar: When "No Cash Changed Hands" Is the Warning, Not the Comfort
Every Monday we scan the week's disclosures not for the biggest numbers, but for the strangest relationships. This week's clearest signal came from a deal in which almost no money moved at all. Enchem, a Korean battery-electrolyte maker, acquired roughly 5.85 million shares of an affiliate — a stake valued at about ₩15.7 billion — from Atlas8000, a private company whose largest shareholder is Enchem's own chief executive. The company did not pay cash. It issued convertible bonds instead. Days later, on July 8, Enchem also bought back about ₩2 billion of its own 13th-series convertible bonds off-market. Earlier in 2026, an external review had already flagged going-concern uncertainty and forced selling by major holders. On a conventional screen, none of this trips an alarm. No large cash outflow. No missed payment. No covenant breach. That is exactly why it belongs on a risk radar. The most instructive relational-risk cases rarely announce themselves through the income sta...