By
Jan 19, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)
South Korea's SillaJen Inc., once the largest stock on Kosdaq by market value, faces a higher risk of being kicked out of the country's junior stock market, dealing a heavy blow to hundreds of thousands of minority investors.
The Korea Exchange (KRX) on Jan. 18 tentatively decided to delist the scandal-hit biotechnology company, on the conclusion that the developer of cancer treatments failed to fulfill self-rescue plans submitted last year.
Trading of the stock has been suspended for 20 months, after its top management was indicted on charges of embezzlement and breach of trust. Its former Chief Executive Moon Eun-sang was accused of selling the company stock using insider information gleaned from the halted clinical trials of its anti-cancer drug. He was arrested in 2020.
Additionally, a number of Sillajen’s former employees were accused of pocketing heavy gains by exercising stock options before its trading was suspended.
As part of self-rescue measures, SillaJen in July of last year raised 100 billion won ($84 million) in rights offering to M2N Co., a Kosdaq-listed company of metal shipping drums.
But a KRX official said its declining pipeline of new drug candidates added to uncertainties over its corporate value.
Once dubbed as a choice of stock by individual investors nationwide, the biotech firm is 92.6% owned by 174,186 minority investors as of end-September, 2021.
It closed at 12,100 won with a market capitalization of 1.2 trillion won, a day before its stock trading was halted on May 4, 2020.
The decision to delist SillaJen was made by KRX's corporate review committee, which needs to be endorsed by the Kosdaq market committee by Feb. 18. In the best-case scenario, the Kosdaq market committee could allow SillaJen to spend another year improving its financial conditions to avoid being delisted.
Even if the Kosdaq market committee votes to kick SillaJen out of the stock market, the company will be allowed to undergo one more formal procedure to appeal the decision.
In response to KRX's Tuesday decision, the company said its R&D and business kept running as normal and its key clinical trials proceeded as scheduled.
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