MBK Partners founder and Chairman Michael ByungJu Kim MBK Partners’ takeover bid for Korea Zinc Inc. aims to improve corporate governance and shareholder value at the world’s largest lead and zinc smelter, the private equity firm’s founder and Chairman Michael ByungJu Kim said.
“To put it simply, it’s all about governance and shareholder value,” Kim said on Monday, responding to a Korea Economic Daily reporter's question about MBK's intentions while attending the groundbreaking ceremony for a library named after him in Seoul.
The Kim ByungJu Library is a Seoul city-operated library partially financed by his 30 billion won ($22 million) donation. It is scheduled for completion in February 2027.
MBK Partners' office in Seoul His comments mark MBK’s first official response to the MBK-Young Poong Corp. alliance’s bid to acquire a controlling stake in Korea Zinc – a tender offer that began Sept. 13.
Industry watchers said Korea Zinc’s battle against the MBK-led group looks set to escalate into a lengthy proxy battle owing to the slight margin between their shareholdings.
(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun) The MBK-led coalition's stake exceeds that of Korea Zinc and its allied shareholders by about 3 percentage points, meaning neither side has secured a majority.
MBK, a private equity firm focused on Northeast Asia, argued that Korea Zinc’s current governance structure is problematic. Young Poong owns 33.1% of Korea Zinc as its largest shareholder, but Chairman Choi exercises management control with his 1.84% stake.
HANKOOK & COMPANY
MBK Partners has a history of challenging such governance issues, as seen in its dispute with Hankook & Company Co. last year.
Korea Zinc Chairman Choi Yun-birm announces a share buyback plan at a press conference on Oct. 2 (Courtesy of Yonhap) MBK was then engaged in an aborted bid to take over Hankook & Company, the holding company of Korea’s largest tire maker Hankook Tire & Technology Co.
At the time, the PEF criticized Hankook’s weak governance and the legal risks faced by its majority shareholders, which it argued were hurting the firm’s corporate value.
Industry watchers said MBK is expected to continue its governance reform-related investments.
(Graphics by Dongbeom Yun) In his annual letter sent to limited partners (LPs) in April, Kim referenced Toshiba Corp. as an example.
Pressured by activist funds, Toshiba was eventually acquired by Japan Industrial Partners (JIP), a private equity firm.
MBK’s Kim said: “The fact that Toshiba was driven to the brink of sale due to shareholder and independent director pressure suggests that any Japanese company could face similar pressure from activist funds. Such shareholder activism has provided PEFs with the opportunity to become a white knight to support management.”
Write to Jong-Kwan Park at pjk@hankyung.com In-Soo Nam edited this article.
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