What Individual Investors Don't See Until It's Too Late
On May 6, 2026, South Korea's National Tax Service announced tax investigations into 31 listed companies — 8 on the KOSPI, 15 on the KOSDAQ — suspected of orchestrating stock manipulation, tunneling, and in some cases, deliberately forcing their own delistings. The suspected total illicit amount: over 2.2 trillion won (approximately $1.6 billion USD). One case in the investigation is particularly instructive. A controlling shareholder allegedly withheld audit documentation on purpose, engineering the company's own delisting. By the time individual investors realized what was happening, the damage was already irreversible. The controlling shareholder had already exited. What remained — the loss — was absorbed entirely by minority investors. The financial statement wasn't the signal. It was the aftermath. Information Asymmetry: The Operating System of Relational Risk This is information asymmetry in its most operationally precise form. The term — first formalized by George Ak...