South Korea's CJ Bioscience Inc., a pharmaceutical company specializing in intestinal microorganisms called microbiomes, will conduct a paid-in capital increase of 65 billion won ($49.2 million) to develop new drugs.
CEO Chun Jong-sik is also participating in this to raise funds for R&D investment.
The company on Monday said its board of directors in a meeting decided to add 3,233,830 shares through a general public offering of forfeited shares after allocation to stakeholders. The price of a new share is an estimated 20,100 won and the record date of allotment is July 10.
The major shareholders include CJ CheilJedang with 43.8% and the CEO with 6.6%.
"Because its entire stake will participate in the increase, the largest shareholder CJ CheilJedang will see no dilution of equity," a CJ Bioscience source said. "The ratio of CEO Chun's participation remains undecided."
Significant costs are required for clinical testing of these candidate drugs and follow-up research.
"This paid-in capital increase is for achieving the goal of new drug development," a CJ Bioscience source said. "We will also create synergy with CJ CheilJedang's health functional food unit by launching a platform to analyze microbiome data."
CJ Bioscience's share price on Tuesday fell nearly 10% on news of its paid-in capital increase.
The company's stock on the secondary stock market Kosdaq closed at 27,650 won, down 9.8% from Monday. During trading on Tuesday, the stock fell as much as 11.4% to 27,150 won.
A large-scale capital increase has the effect of diluting the value of shares and is often a factor in a stock's decline.
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