Decoding RaymondsIndex: CEI Explained — When Capital Stops Working
Two regulatory events this week frame today's deep dive better than any hypothetical could. On July 1, Korea's strengthened delisting rules took effect. Market-cap floors rose to 30 billion won for KOSPI and 20 billion won for KOSDAQ (rising again in January 2027). A new penny-stock rule puts companies trading below 1,000 won for 30 consecutive sessions on the watchlist. And full capital impairment now triggers delisting review at the half-year mark — regulators no longer wait for the annual report. Meanwhile in Washington, the House took up an NDAA amendment that would bar major defense contractors — companies drawing more than half their revenue from Pentagon contracts — from buying back their own stock. The Senate Armed Services Committee adopted an even broader version covering dividends and other capital distributions. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Aerospace Industries Association, and the Business Roundtable urged the House Rules Committee to reject it, calling buybac...