NPS approves POSCO's split into holding firm, steelmaker unit

Getting the green light from the largest shareholder should accelerate approval from foreign investors, which own 53%

POSCO Group headquarters
POSCO Group headquarters
Jong-woo Kim and Jung-hwan Hwang 2
2022-01-24 20:56:32 jongwoo@hankyung.com
Corporate restructuring

The National Pension Service (NPS) of Korea, the largest shareholder of POSCO Co., has given its nod to the steelmaking giant’s plan to split into a holding company and a steelmaking company. As six out of nine members of an NPS committee on Jan. 24 approved the split-off, the restructuring plan is gaining momentum.

POSCO Group approved the restructuring plan at its board meeting last December. The move aims to grow new sectors such as secondary batteries and hydrogen, as well as strengthen the holding firm’s role to find new businesses and invest. The holding company will own a 100% stake in the steelmaker unit.

The group said it will not list the steelmaking unit and other businesses, such as hydrogen, lithium and nickel, that will be newly launched by the holding company. This is to address existing shareholder concerns about listing the steelmaker unit, the group stated.

TO PROTECT EXISTING SHAREHOLDER VALUE

NPS, which holds a 9.75% stake in POSCO Co., was the key decisionmaker for the split-off agenda. Besides the world’s third-largest pension fund, global investment firm BlackRock, which has a 5.23% stake in the steelmaker company, is the only shareholder owning more than 5%.

To pass through its extraordinary shareholders’ meeting due on Jan. 28, POSCO should surmount two hurdles – receiving approval from stakeholders that own more than one-third of issued shares; and agreement from more than two-thirds of shareholders attending the meeting.

Foreign shareholders, who together hold as much as a 52.7% stake in POSCO, are poised to approve the restructuring plan as proxy advisers including Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. (ISS), Glass Lewis & Co. and Korea ESG Research Institute are endorsing the plan. NPS’ agreement has raised the likelihood of the plan's success.

The pension service has voted against the split-off of Korean corporates for years – it opposed LG Chem Ltd.’s plan to split off its battery business in 2020 and SK Innovation Co.'s plan to split off its battery unit last year for the reason that the split-off could undermine shareholder value. NPS’ vetoes to these corporate split-offs led to expectations that the pension service would disagree with POSCO’s plan.

NPS’ approval followed POSCO’s decision not to list the steelmaking unit after the split-off to protect existing shareholder value. The pension service also said POSCO’s plan is different from other corporates' previous split-off plans, as the steelmaker is determined to cancel treasury shares in its to-be-launched holding company. Treasury stock retirement will likely shore up POSCO’s share price by reducing the number of shares in circulation, resulting in dividends per share. POSCO holds 13.3% of its own shares.

The group will start reshuffling once the transformation plan is confirmed on Friday. It will then kick off investment in new eco-friendly businesses including lithium, nickel and hydrogen.

Write to Jong-woo Kim and Jung-hwan Hwang at jongwoo@hankyung.com
Jihyun Kim edited this article.

Proxy advisors recommend NPS vote for POSCO split-off

Proxy advisors recommend NPS vote for POSCO split-off

South Korea's National Pension Service (NPS), the largest shareholder of POSCO Co., was recommended by all its four proxy advisors to vote for the steelmaker's plan to split itself into a holding company and a steelmaking unit, according to people with knowledge of the matter on Wednesday.Glas

POSCO plans to cancel treasury shares in its holding firm

POSCO plans to cancel treasury shares in its holding firm

POSCO Chairman and CEO Choi Jeong-woo Top management of South Korea's POSCO Co. has decided to cancel treasury shares in its to-be-launched holding company, in an effort to win shareholder support for the steelmaker's transformation into a holding company structure. The size and timin

POSCO puts stability above reform in management overhaul

POSCO puts stability above reform in management overhaul

Kim Hak-dong, vice chairman of POSCO's steel business South Korea’s steel giant POSCO has chosen stability over reform in its latest management overhaul, retaining most chief executives at group affiliates, ahead of the company's proposed corporate restructuring toward a holding company s

POSCO CEO says split-off units will never be listed

POSCO CEO says split-off units will never be listed

POSCO Chairman and CEO Choi Jeong-woo POSCO Group Chairman and Chief Executive Choi Jeong-woo on Monday reaffirmed the group's determination not to list on the stock market the steelmaking unit and other businesses to be separated from its to-be-launched holding company.The parent group of the

POSCO mulls holding company structure to raise enterprise value

POSCO mulls holding company structure to raise enterprise value

POSCO's blast furnace South Korea's largest steelmaker POSCO is considering splitting up the company to launch an investment holding firm as part of efforts to enhance its enterprise value.Following the separation, the steelmaking unit and other current affiliates will be placed under the

POSCO approves holding company plan for eco-friendly business

POSCO approves holding company plan for eco-friendly business

POSCO headquarters in Seoul South Korea’s POSCO Co. is set to split off the company to launch an investment holding firm, 21 years after its privatization. The move aims to transform the world’s fifth-largest steelmaker by output into an eco-friendly materials producer while improvi

(* comment hide *}