NPS corp governance committee taps SNU professor as member

Kim Woojin, a Seoul National University Business School professor, will be in charge of the committee’s voting rights division

Kim Woojin, a professor at Seoul National University Business School
Kim Woojin, a professor at Seoul National University Business School
Byeong-Hwa Ryu 1
2024-05-20 20:29:28 hwahwa@hankyung.com
Pension funds

A corporate governance committee of South Korea’s National Pension Service (NPS), the world's third-largest pension fund, has named a Seoul National University professor as a member after one of its members left last month to work for the ruling People Power party in the general election.

Kim Woojin, a professor at Seoul National University Business School majoring in corporate governance and control-related issues, is set to serve as a member of the NPS advisory committee for improving the system of rules, practices and processes by which a company is directed and controlled, according to investment banking industry sources on Monday. He will be in charge of the voting rights division in the committee.

Kim has already been a member of the investment policy committee, which covers the NPS’ asset allocations.

COMPLETION OF NINE-MEMBER COMMITTEE

The corporate governance committee lost a member in January when Kim Gyeong-ryul, an accountant who raised issues on the US private equity firm Lone Star Funds’ acquisition of a local bank, resigned to join the ruling party's emergency leadership committee for the April election.

The appointment of Professor Kim completes the nine-member committee chaired by Kim Hwa-jin, a professor at Seoul National University’s law school.

The committee focuses on NPS’ policies on corporate governance structures and shareholder rights exercises. It was founded last December to check and advise on the environmental, social, and governance (ESG)-related activities of the National Pension Fund Management Committee.

The corporate governance committee has three divisions – corporate governance improvement, voting rights and stewardship code.

Write to Byeong-Hwa Ryu at hwahwa@hankyung.com
 
Jongwoo Cheon edited this article.

NPS' former key players move to law firms as its voting power increases

NPS' former key players move to law firms as its voting power increases

National Pension Service headquarters in Jeonju, South Korea (Courtesy of Yonhap News) South Korea’s National Pension Service (NPS) is seeing more and more of its former senior managers moving to top-tier domestic law firms. There are growing concerns that the former staff may be represen

NPS to vote in favor of KT&G CEO candidate Bang

NPS to vote in favor of KT&G CEO candidate Bang

KT&G's headquarters in Seoul (Courtesy of Yonhap News) South Korea’s National Pension Service (NPS), the world’s third-largest pension fund, is slated to vote in favor of the KT&G Corp. board’s nomination of Bang Kyung-man as the next chief executive officer, investmen

NPS to veto adding Hyosung chair, vice chair to board

NPS to veto adding Hyosung chair, vice chair to board

Hyosung Group headquarters in Seoul The National Pension Service (NPS) will veto the appointment of the chairman and vice chairman of Hyosung Corp. as inside board members of the de facto holding company of the textile and chemicals conglomerate and its affiliates, according to the South Korean

NPS chief questions fairness in POSCO’s CEO selection process

NPS chief questions fairness in POSCO’s CEO selection process

POSCO Chairman Choi Jeong-woo is expected to seek his third term as group CEO POSCO Holdings Inc., the parent of South Korea’s largest steelmaker POSCO, has come under fire for its opaqueness in choosing a new leader as its largest shareholder suspects that the current selection process

Seoul sees high odds of reversing Lone Star-favoring ruling

Seoul sees high odds of reversing Lone Star-favoring ruling

Justice Minister Han Dong-hoon briefs reporters on the ICSID's ruling over a dispute with Lone Star South Korea’s justice ministry expressed confidence in winning an appeal against an international ruling that accepted part of Lone Star’s compensation demand relating to its $3 billi

(* comment hide *}