Activst fund KCGI struggles to fund Hanyang Securities deal

Its bid for the brokerage firm is more than four times the latter’s market price

KCGI CEO Kang Sung-boo (File photo by Eun-Koo Kang)
KCGI CEO Kang Sung-boo (File photo by Eun-Koo Kang)
Jong-Kwan Park, Ji-Eun Ha and Hyeong-Gyo Seo 2
2024-09-03 11:32:53 pjk@hankyung.com
Mergers & Acquisitions

KCGI, a South Korean private equity firm, has been struggling to raise funds for its 244.9-billion-won ($183 million) purchase of a controlling stake in Hanyang Securities Co. with investors put off by its high bidding price and regulatory hurdles, putting the deal at risk of collapse, according to people familiar with the situation on Monday. 

Last month, KCGI, known as an activist fund, was named the preferred buyer of a 29.6% stake in Hanyang Securities, a small-sized specialist in fixed-income trading. For the deal, it tentatively agreed to pay 65,000 won per share, more than four times its market price of 15,690 won as of Monday's close.

The two sides are set to finalize their negotiations this week before signing a binding deal.

To fund the stake purchase, Kang Sung-boo, chief executive of KCGI, has reached out to domestic financial services firms, including Daol Investment & Securities Co., Cape Investment & Securities Co. and OK Financial Group, the parent of OK Savings Bank.

To entice them to back the deal, Kang offered them call options for the brokerage house. But none of them have signed their letters of commitment to the transaction, said the sources, raising doubts about the finalization of the deal.

DAOL INVESTMENT & SECURITIES

In particular, Kang persuaded Daol Investment’s Chairman Lee Byung-chul to 
join a consortium to take control of Hanyang Securities, South Korea’s 28th largest brokerage firm.

Lee was said to have shown interest in joining hands with Kang in hopes that Hanyang Securities may act as his white knight in a possible hostile takeover bid for Daol Investment, in which he owns a 24.82% stake as the largest shareholder.

But Daol Investment decided at a recent executive meeting not to team up with KCGI on concerns that KCGI's financial support for the deal would deteriorate its bottom line.

(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)
(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)

OK Financial Group is considering participating in the consortium to expand into the brokerage sector, said the sources. But the group said it has not determined yet whether to join KCGI in securing control of Hanyang Securities.

Cape Investment, which had also vied for Hanyang Securities, is understood to be focused on improving its financial structure.

(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)
(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun)


REGULATORY HURDLE

Even though KCGI wins their backing, there remains another hurdle to clear. KCGI is subject to regulatory scrutiny over its eligibility as a new controlling shareholder of Hanyang Securities.

Regulatory authorities had pledged to strictly review the deal that bankers argued had been conducted in an untransparent manner: not hiring a sale manager and skipping the due diligence process for preliminary bidders.

In addition, industry observers said KCGI’s offer of call options on Hanyang Securities to financial backers could make it difficult to win regulatory approval.

Hanyang Securities' headquarters in Yeouido, Seoul
Hanyang Securities' headquarters in Yeouido, Seoul

A failure to close the Hanyang Securities deal would hurt the credibility of KCGI, once a vocal activist fund. Recently, it gave up on the purchase of Nextin Inc., a Kosdaq-listed semiconductor equipment maker, after failing to pay the acquisition price by the deadline.  

The runner-up for the controlling stake in Hanyang Securities is domestic fashion retailer LF Group.

Write to Jong-Kwan Park, Ji-Eun Ha and Hyeong-Gyo Seo at pjk@hankyung.com
 

Yeonhee Kim edited this article. 

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