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Business & Politics

Korea’s ruling party revives corporate law reform with stricter rules

It adds provisions to facilitate cumulative voting and strengthens the independence of auditors

By Jun 06, 2025 (Gmt+09:00)

2 Min read

Democratic Party lawmakers on June 5 applaud after passing three special investigation bills previously vetoed by former President Yoon Suk Yeol (Courtesy of News1)
Democratic Party lawmakers on June 5 applaud after passing three special investigation bills previously vetoed by former President Yoon Suk Yeol (Courtesy of News1)

South Korea’s ruling party is reviving its push for an amendment to the Commercial Act with tougher mandates aimed at protecting minority shareholders’ rights than previously proposed. The country’s then-acting president vetoed an earlier version of the bill in March.

The move is gaining momentum after Lee Jae-myung, head of the liberal Democratic Party, was sworn in as the nation’s 21st president on Wednesday.

The proposed reform, unveiled on Thursday, includes the expansion of boards of directors’ fiduciary duties to act in the interests of not only the companies, but also minority shareholders.

It also makes it mandatory for listed companies with assets exceeding 2 trillion won ($1.5 billion) to offer electronic shareholder meetings in addition to in-person gatherings, enabling remote participation.

NEW PROVISIONS

The draft bill adds new clauses prohibiting large listed firms from rejecting cumulative voting requests to enable minority shareholders to concentrate their votes on specific board of directors in proxy fights.

The draft also includes a provision that would require companies to raise the number of audit committee members elected separately from the board of directors and strengthen the independence of outside directors.

South Korean President Lee Jae-myung speaks at a Memorial Day ceremony on June 6, 2025 (Courtesy of Yonhap)
South Korean President Lee Jae-myung speaks at a Memorial Day ceremony on June 6, 2025 (Courtesy of Yonhap)


The National Assembly, where the Democratic Party holds a majority, passed an earlier version of the Commercial Act amendment in March amid growing calls to strengthen corporate responsibility in management.

However, it faced strong criticism from business leaders, who warned the change would expose more companies to management disputes and foster a risk-averse culture among entrepreneurs.

“Our party will move forward with a reform of the Commercial Act, reflecting the public’s will, expressed through the election,” Oh Gi-hyoung, a lawmaker of the Democratic Party, told a press conference on Friday.

He leads the ruling party’s task force team set up to revitalize domestic stock markets.

During the presidential campaign, Lee had pledged to enact the corporate law revision within two or three weeks of taking office.

Choi Yun-birm, chairman of Korea Zinc, retained control of the lead processor in March, defeating an MBK-led group through cumulative voting
Choi Yun-birm, chairman of Korea Zinc, retained control of the lead processor in March, defeating an MBK-led group through cumulative voting

Under the proposed reform, listed companies would be required to raise the number of audit members elected separately from the board of directors to at least two from the current one.

They also need to increase the proportion of independent directors to more than one-third of the board, up from more than one-fourth under the current law.

Additionally, South Korea would tighten the qualifications for independent board members.

Once passed, the bill will take effect immediately without a grace period, except for provisions on electronic voting.

The ruling party also seeks to reform the Capital Markets Act to address the Korea Discount – the persistent undervaluation of South Korean companies relative to their intrinsic values.

Write to Kwang-Sik Lee at bumeran@hankyung.com
 


Yeonhee Kim edited this article.
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