When Winning Isn't Enough: Edinburgh Worldwide, Bain Capital Korea, and the Structural Logic of Relational Risk
■ The Edinburgh Paradox Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust (EWI), managed by Baillie Gifford, has defeated Saba Capital Management at the ballot box twice. In January 2026, 53.2% of shareholders voted to retain the incumbent board, and over 90% of non-Saba shareholders rejected Saba's nominees. Yet in April 2026, EWI's board is proposing a 100% exit tender offer — effectively winding down a 28-year-old institution. The board has warned there is a "high probability" that Saba wins control at the April 30 AGM. How does a twice-defeated activist maintain the ability to threaten corporate dissolution? The answer is structural, not transactional. ■ Relational Architecture, Not Vote Counts Saba Capital holds 31% of EWI's shares. That is not a financial position — it is a persistent structural presence in the governance network. No individual vote can neutralize the permanent relational authority of a 31% block. Every resolution, every strategy, every board appointment...