Sunday, December 22, 2024

Analysis-Korea Zinc takeover battle tests Seoul’s resolve on tackling ‘Korea discount’

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By Hyunjoo Jin, Cynthia Kim and Kane Wu

SEOUL (Reuters) – A takeover battle over Korea Zinc is adding pressure on Seoul to pass legislative reforms to ensure better protections for all investors in a country with a stock market dominated by family-run conglomerates.

Korea Zinc Chairman Yun B. Choi, a grandson of a co-founder, last week agreed to scrap a controversial plan to issue new shares in the world’s largest zinc refiner to help fend off a takeover attempt from the co-founding family’s Youngpoong Corp and its partner, private equity group MBK Partners.

The share issue plan had infuriated many investors, as two days before it was announced, Korea Zinc finalised a buyback at a 25% higher price.

Choi backed down after a regulatory probe and intense shareholder pressure that brought international attention to corporate governance shortcomings in Asia’s fourth-largest economy.

But Korea Zinc’s actions under his leadership have fuelled scepticism over whether the government’s call for voluntary efforts by companies to boost depressed stock valuations is sufficient, according to interviews with more than a dozen investors, governance experts, regulators and lawmakers.

After Choi became chairman in 2022, Korea Zinc signed deals with LG Chem and Hanwha Corp to invest in each other, in an arrangement known as a cross-shareholding, though it sold shares in the latter this month to help repay debt. Under Choi, it also sold stock to strategic partners including Hyundai Motor Group and Trafigura.

“Why do you use company funds, not your own money to increase your control?” asked Park Yoo-kyung, a managing director at Netherlands-based APG Asset Management, who noted Korea Zinc could have formed joint ventures or used other types of contracts.

Many companies in Japan are unwinding cross-shareholding deals, which have been criticised as negative for corporate governance because they can insulate management from having to meet the interests of shareholders.

Korea Zinc said the cross-shareholdings were needed to ensure stable partnerships as it expanded into battery materials, hydrogen and other businesses.

Hahm Yong-il, senior deputy governor of the Financial Supervisory Service, said Korea Zinc’s moves had fuelled investor doubts about board independence.

The regulator’s commitment to reforming and improving capital markets is being tested, said Hahm, whose agency is investigating allegedly unfair practices in Korea Zinc’s proposed share issue plan even after it was cancelled.

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