Kakao installs an outdoor billboard for Kakao Webtoon in Thailand (Courtesy of Kakao Entertainment) Kakao Corp., South Korea’s largest mobile platform, is looking to sell a majority stake in Kakao Entertainment Corp., dropping a plan to take it public following the sharp stock market downturn, according to investment banking sources on Tuesday.
In a recent letter to Kakao Entertainment’s major financial investors, the mobile giant has notified them of its plan to unload its majority stake in the unit, said the sources, a move seen as aimed at exiting it at an appropriate valuation.
Its shareholders include Singapore’s GIC, Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), China’s Tencent and Anchor Equity Partners.
The move comes as Kakao Entertainment has been shedding unprofitable units to improve its financial health, fueling speculation that it might revive its IPO plans, which have been on hold since 2021. It had attempted a Nasdaq listing, but to no avail.
Kakao Corp. holds a 66.03% stake, followed by Anchor Equity with a 12% stake. A special-purpose company set up by Anchor Equity and GIC owns a 6.73% stake, while PIF and Tencent hold 5.1% and 4.5% stakes, respectively.
Following its purchase of K-pop pioneer SM Entertainment Co. in 2023, its enterprise value was estimated at as much as 20 trillion won. However, the deteriorating performance of some of the units it acquired led to a swelling in debts.
Nth Romance, a Kakao Webtoon series Kakao Entertainment’s business spans three main areas: music labels, the digital content platform Kakao Webtoon and film production.
Since 2021, it has bulked up through M&As, with its subsidiary count increasing to 53 in 2022 from 14 in 2020.
In 2021, it acquired Tapas Media, a US digital comics platform, and the US fiction app Radish Fiction for around 1 trillion won in total. But the two companies are in the process of liquidation.
Investment bankers say potential buyers include gaming companies such as NCSOFT Corp. and Krafton Inc., other entertainment powerhouses such as HYBE Co., and private equity firms.
The sale may allow Anchor Equity, a decade-long investor in Kakao Entertainment, to soon exit its stake.
But PIF and GIC may not join other investors in selling their shares due to the decline in the company’s valuation, say industry observers.
In 2024, operating profit at Kakao Entertainment jumped 16.5% to 80.6 billion won from the year prior, despite a 3.2% dip to 1.81 trillion won in sales.
Write to Jong-Kwan Park, Jun-Ho Cha and Da-Eun Choi at pjk@hankyung.com
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