Key Points

South Korean financial authorities have caught a group of super-rich individuals in a major stock manipulation scheme. The suspects, including hospital and academy operators, allegedly used over 100 billion won to manipulate prices. This case is the first for a new joint task force established under President Lee Jae Myung. The task force plans to impose heavy fines and trading restrictions as a strict deterrent.

Key Points: South Korea Raids Super-Rich in Major Stock Manipulation Scheme

  • Suspects include hospital operators and private equity fund officials
  • Scheme used over 100 billion won to place fictitious orders
  • Group allegedly earned 23 billion won in illicit profits over 21 months
  • New joint task force plans fines up to twice the illegal gains
2 min read

Super-rich individuals caught for alleged massive stock manipulation scheme

Financial authorities raid elite suspects in a 100 billion won manipulation case, marking the first action by a new presidential task force.

"We need to make it clear that stock manipulation leads to ruin. - President Lee Jae Myung"

Seoul, Sep 23

Super-rich individuals and former financial firm officials have been caught orchestrating a massive stock manipulation scheme, financial authorities said on Tuesday, as part of an extensive probe into unfair trading aimed at rooting out illegal market activity.

The Financial Services Commission (FSC), Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) and Korea Exchange said they conducted raids on more than ten locations, including the homes and offices of seven suspects, who had used large sums of money to manipulate stock prices, reports Yonhap news agency.

The suspects allegedly mobilised over 100 billion won (US$71.7 million) in corporate funds and financial institution loans to lure investors through high-volume, fictitious orders over about 21 months from early last year, earning around 23 billion won in profit.

The group includes operators of general hospitals and large academies, as well as officials from a major private equity fund and financial firms.

It marks the first case handled by the recently launched joint task force established by the financial agencies, created to crack down on unfair trading in line with President Lee Jae Myung's push for stricter enforcement.

Based on the investigation, the task force plans to impose fines of up to twice the illicit gains and actively enforce punishable measures, such as restrictions on financial product trading and appointment as executives of listed companies, to establish a "one-strike-out" precedent.

During a recent press conference, Lee warned of strict penalties for stock manipulation and false disclosures, stating, "We need to make it clear that stock manipulation leads to ruin."

Meanwhile, South Korean stocks narrowed earlier gains late on Tuesday morning as investors cashed in profits from the recent market rally.

The benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) had risen 9.16 points, or 0.26 percent, to 3,477.81 as of 11:20 a.m.

Leading tech giant Samsung Electronics moved up 1.08 percent, and SK hynix added 1.42 percent.

Carmakers traded higher as well, with Hyundai Motor rising 0.46 percent and Kia increasing 0.1 percent. Auto parts maker Hyundai Mobis, on the other hand, shed 0.48 percent.

—IANS

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
₹600 crore manipulation! This happens in India too with penny stocks. SEBI should learn from Korea's "one-strike-out" policy. Our market needs such strong deterrents.
M
Michael C
Interesting to see hospital and academy operators involved. In India, we've seen similar patterns where educational institutions are used for money laundering. The modus operandi is global.
A
Ananya R
While I appreciate the crackdown, I hope this doesn't become just a showpiece action. Real reform requires consistent enforcement, not just occasional high-profile cases. The system needs deeper changes.
S
Sarah B
️‍💼 As someone working in finance, I can say these manipulations hurt market integrity globally. Indian regulators should collaborate with international agencies to prevent cross-border financial crimes.
K
Karthik V
The greed never ends! When will these wealthy people understand that small investors' savings are at stake? Bhagwan inhe samajh de! 🙏

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