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Korea's KOSDAQ Delisting Storm and the Kakao Games Signal: What Relational Risk Detects Before the Filings Do

■ The Regulatory Clock Accelerates On April 1, 2026, Korea's Financial Services Commission (FSC) and Korea Exchange activated Phase 2 of the country's landmark KOSDAQ delisting reform. The changes are significant: Exit review timelines compressed from 18 months to 12 months Disclosure violation thresholds lowered from 15 penalty points to 10 "Penny stock" rule introduced: companies with share prices below KRW 1,000 for 30 consecutive trading days face management designation The scale of impact is striking. Initial projections estimated 50 companies at risk. FSC's revised simulation now puts the figure at up to 150 KOSDAQ companies — potentially 220 — facing delisting in 2026 alone. ■ The Kakao Games Signal On March 25, Kakao — Korea's dominant digital conglomerate — announced the transfer of controlling ownership of Kakao Games to Japan's LY Corporation (the LINE Yahoo parent). LY's special purpose vehicle, LAAA Investment, will acquire s...

Korea's Delisting Wave Has Arrived — And Relational Risk Signals Saw It Coming

■ What Happened Today Korea's Financial Services Commission (FSC) officially activated Phase 1 of its landmark delisting reform on April 1, 2026 Up to 150 KOSDAQ companies are now subject to accelerated exit procedures under streamlined regulatory timelines From July 1, 2026, market capitalization requirements rise to ₩20 billion for KOSDAQ; KOSPI requirements will reach ₩50 billion by 2028 A new dynamic stock price floor (₩1,000 minimum) is also being phased in, with automatic delisting triggers if breached for 45 of 90 consecutive trading days ■ The Global Signal: Activist Investors Are Already Here Hong Kong-based Oasis Management declared HORIBA's March 2026 AGM a "clear warning to the board" — one of the most direct activist signals in recent East Asian corporate history HORIBA's board had rejected Oasis's governance demands, yet 2026 AGM voting results revealed deep minority shareholder dissent, validating Oasis's campaign Simultaneously,...

Korea's 2026 Governance Earthquake: When Board Reshuffles Become the Earliest Warning Signal

 ■ The Super AGM Season Is Over. The Real Test Begins Now. Korea's 2026 "super AGM season" just closed — and by most accounts, it was the most consequential in a decade. Facing a once-in-a-generation overhaul of the Commercial Act, listed companies scrambled to revise articles of incorporation, reconstitute boards, and pre-empt an increasingly assertive shareholder activism movement. The headline reforms are now well documented: - The 3% rule for audit committee appointments tightens on July 23, capping controlling shareholders and their associates at 3% of voting rights in director elections - Mandatory concentrated voting (집중투표제) takes effect September 10, enabling minority shareholders to more effectively elect directors of their choosing - Independent directors must now constitute at least one-third of the board, up from one-quarter - Companies must publicly disclose approval and rejection vote counts for every resolution ■ The Question Nobody Is Asking Most analysts ...

The 32% Discount That Screams: When Korea's Controlling Shareholders Exit Below Market, Relational Risk Is Already Here

When Elliott Knocks: Mitsui OSK, Governance Signals, and the Korean Parallel

■ The Wake-Up Call When activist hedge fund Elliott Investment Management disclosed a "significant" stake in Japanese shipping giant Mitsui OSK Lines on March 17, 2026, shares jumped 12% in a single session. No earnings surprise. No product announcement. No macro catalyst. Just a governance signal—and the market knew exactly what it meant. Elliott's demands were precise: review the real estate portfolio, relist subsidiary Daibiru (which was quietly taken private in 2022), and ensure the upcoming mid-term management plan is "appropriately ambitious." Mitsui OSK shares hit record highs. The financial statements hadn't moved. The relationships had. ■ Relational Risk in Action This is the core insight behind 20 years of Korean M&A PMI work: financial statements are lagging indicators. By the time the numbers deteriorate, the relational structure has already telegraphed the outcome. Elliott didn't build its thesis from quarterly P&L analys...

Korea's 2026 AGM Season and the Relational Risk Signals No One Is Watching

  ■ The Discount That Said Everything In February 2026, Yuil Energytech's controlling shareholder sold a 17.42% stake at ₩917 per share—a 32% discount to the prevailing market price of ₩1,355. The buyer was SJ Holdings' Private Investment Partnership No. 4: a private equity vehicle acquiring distressed control at a steep haircut. This is not a story about one company. This is a story about what financial statements don't show until it's too late. ■ The Lagging Problem with Financial Data Yuil Energytech's accumulated deficit at the time of sale: ₩21.3 billion. Operating losses in each of the prior three years. Net loss in the most recent year: ₩9 billion. These numbers arrived after the fact. Balance sheets are rear-view mirrors. They tell you where a company has been, not where its relationships are fracturing right now. Relational Risk—the measurable erosion of a company's governance, human, and funding networks—signals distress months before financial s...

WP Model v6.0.0 — Worsening Probability Results: 2,760 Korean Listed Companies