Key Points

South Korea's Financial Supervisory Service has launched an on-site investigation into MBK Partners regarding their 2015 takeover of Homeplus. The probe focuses on alleged irregularities in the acquisition process and fundraising scheme for the troubled retailer. Homeplus recently entered court-led rehabilitation proceedings after facing severe financial difficulties. The investigation comes as the retailer announces closure of 15 outlets amid worsening business conditions.

Key Points: FSS Investigates MBK Partners Over Homeplus Takeover Irregularities

  • FSS accuses Homeplus of selling debt before rating downgrade
  • Probe examines MBK's 2015 $5.2B Tesco acquisition
  • Homeplus entered court rehabilitation in March 2024
  • Private equity fund prepared for court scheme without recovery efforts
2 min read

Financial watchdog looking into MBK Partners over Homeplus takeover

South Korea's financial watchdog probes MBK Partners' 2015 Homeplus acquisition and debt sale practices as retailer enters court rehabilitation.

"MBK Partners chair Kim Byung-ju will use his personal assets to support suppliers - Company Statement"

Seoul, Aug 27

The country's financial watchdog sent staff to MBK Partners Ltd.'s office on Wednesday, to investigate any irregularities in the process of the private equity fund's acquisition of now-troubled retailer Homeplus.

MBK Partners acquired a 100 per cent stake in Homeplus in 2015 from British retailer Tesco Plc for 7.2 trillion won ($5.2 billion), reports Yonhap news agency.

The on-site probe by the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) came as the watchdog is expanding its investigation into details of MBK Partner's takeover of Homeplus, including the fundraising scheme.

The move came after the FSS referred MBK Partners to the prosecution for a further probe into Homeplus' debt sale fiasco.

The FSS has accused Homeplus of selling short-term debts while being aware of an imminent rating downgrade, while also arguing that the equity fund had prepared for a court rehabilitation scheme for a long period of time without self-recovery efforts amid the retailer's weakening financial status.

Homeplus entered court-led rehabilitation proceedings in March.

MBK Partners earlier said its chair, Kim Byung-ju, will use his personal assets to support suppliers of the major discount store chain affected by the court-led rehabilitation process.

The FSS' on-site probe into MBK also came as the retailer said it will close 15 out of its 125 outlets here as part of emergency management measures amid a worsening business environment, which drew criticism from the political sector and civic groups.

The probe also comes as Lee Chan-jin, nominee for the FSS' new chief, is set to undergo a parliamentary hearing early next month.

Meanwhile, South Korean stocks opened nearly flat on Wednesday as investors sat on the sidelines ahead of Nvidia's upcoming second-quarter earnings report, which may offer cues on the artificial intelligence (AI) industry.

The benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) edged down 1.09 points, or 0.03 percent, to 3,178.27 in the first 15 minutes of trading.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The chair using personal assets to support suppliers is a good gesture, but it shouldn't have come to this point. Proper due diligence and responsible management could have prevented this mess. 😕
A
Aman W
Closing 15 stores means job losses for so many families. Private equity takeovers often lead to such outcomes - we've seen similar patterns in India with some retail acquisitions. Very concerning.
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Sarah B
Interesting timing with the new FSS chief nominee's hearing coming up. Hope this investigation is thorough and not just for political show. Retail employees and suppliers deserve transparency.
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Vikram M
Selling debt while knowing about rating downgrade? That's straight up unethical. Indian regulators should learn from such international cases to strengthen our financial oversight mechanisms.
M
Michael C
The $5.2 billion acquisition in 2015 and now court rehabilitation in 2024 - that's quite a downfall. Shows how quickly things can turn in retail business. Due diligence is everything!

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