Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear speaks at the Kentucky State Capital in Frankfort on Sept. 28, 2021 during the official announcement that Ford Motor and SK Innovation will build two electric battery factories in Glendale, Ky. SK Innovation’s battery unit SK On is working to raise $3.3 billion in the first half of 2022 to finance capacity expansion. (Courtesy of AP, Yonhap) South Korea’s SK On Co., the world’s fifth-largest electric vehicle battery maker, is set to raise up to 1 trillion won ($822.5 million) from a consortium of local private equity firms as it aims to secure a total of $3.3 billion in the first half of this year for production capacity expansion.
SK On, wholly owned by SK Innovation Co., is doing the processing work to receive the investment from a consortium led by South Korea-based EastBridge Partners, according to investment banking industry sources on Friday. Korea Investment Private Equity and Stella PE participated in the consortium.
Those PE firms have reportedly been discussing the investment and carrying out due diligence since early this year, apart from SK On’s efforts to secure money from global PE firms. Their investment conditions are expected to be the same as those for global PE firms, anchor investors and institutional investors, which are allotted shares before the subscription opening of an initial public offering.
The South Korean consortium is set to secure about a 3% stake in SK On through the investment. Deutsche Bank and JPMorgan are managing the deal.
EastBridge’s CEO Choi Dongsuk served as the head of the Korea investment banking division at Goldman Sachs in Seoul from 2014 to 2017. Prior to working at the South Korean branch, he spent 12 years in M&A and group sponsorship at the investment banking division of Goldman Sachs in Hong Kong.
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