Activist fund Oasis boosts Korea team amid investor-friendly policy shift

Also, Steel Partners is looking to return to Korea and revive its activist campaigns

(Courtesy of Getty Images)
(Courtesy of Getty Images)
Jong-Kwan Park and Jun-Ho Cha 3
Apr 22, 2025 (Gmt+09:00) pjk@hankyung.com
Shareholder activism

Hong Kong-based activist fund Oasis Management is ramping up hiring for its Korea team as Seoul’s push to boost corporate value and strengthen minority investor rights paves the way for increased shareholder activism.

The new Korea-focused hires follow last year’s addition of a junior analyst dedicated to the South Korean market, according to investment banking sources on Tuesday.

They will be based in Hong Kong and tasked with engaging top management of South Korean companies, signaling it is stepping up activist efforts in Asia’s No. 4 economy. Oasis Management runs offices in Hong Kong, Japan, the US and the Cayman Islands.

Founded in 2002, Oasis has focused on Asia with a track record of targeting Japanese companies, including game company Nintendo Co., electronics manufacturer Kyocera Corp. and camera and medical equipment maker Canon Inc. It is currently leading a shareholder campaign against chemical and cosmetics maker Kao Corp.

“South Korea is becoming the next target of major global activist funds,” said an investment banker, noting that government-led initiatives for governance reforms and regulatory shifts favoring minority shareholders echo similar moves seen in Japan.

“They are still heavily focused on Japan, merely stopping over in Korea during their Japan trips. But they are preparing to scale up operations in South Korea,” he added.

(Courtesy of Getty Images)
(Courtesy of Getty Images)

Oasis began investing in Korean companies about four to five years ago, but has yet to launch any activist campaigns in the country.

Last year, it became the first foreign fund to join the Korean Corporate Governance Forum, a non-profit organization registered with the regulatory Financial Supervisory Commission.

The forum, established by institutional investors, lawyers and academics, aims to improve the corporate governance of Korean conglomerates and financial companies.

STEEL PARTNERS

US-based Steel Partners is looking to revive its activist campaigns in Korea. Last month, its officials visited Seoul to meet with major Korean activist funds and study the market, according to the sources.

It made its name in 2006 with a joint campaign alongside renowned activist investor Carl Icahn to push for governance reforms at KT&G Corp., South Korea's No. 1 tobacco and ginseng supplier.

However, it exited the Korean market following a regulatory probe into alleged unfair trade practices related to its KT&G investment.

Lee Jae-myung (second from right)
Lee Jae-myung (second from right)

Global activist investors are welcoming the government-led initiative to tackle the Korea Discount -- the persistent undervaluation of Korean companies relative to their intrinsic value.

Seoul is calling on companies to implement shareholder-friendly measures, including boosting dividend payouts and retiring treasury shares.

Such moves are expected to improve the odds for activist funds to unlock value through campaigns, as they have successfully done with Japanese companies.

Last month, the opposition-controlled National Assembly passed an amendment to the Commercial Act. But it was vetoed by Finance Minister Choi Sang-mok, who was then serving as acting president following the impeachment of President Yoon Suk Yeol.

Further boosting momentum for shareholder activism, potential presidential candidate Lee Jae-myung pledged on Monday to move forward with the revised Commercial Act if elected, during a meeting with research heads of domestic brokerage firms.

Lee, head of the opposition Democratic Party, is leading the polls by a wide margin for the June 3 snap presidential election. Former President Yoon Suk Yeol was ousted by the Constitutional Court early this month on the back of his ill-fated martial law attempt.

An amendment to the Commercial Act will include clauses expanding directors’ fiduciary duties to better protect the interests of minority investors, while making it mandatory for companies to introduce cumulative voting systems.

It also requires companies to elect audit committee directors separate from other board members, while capping major shareholders’ voting rights at 3% during the election process to ensure the committee’s independence.

The cumulative voting system allows shareholders to cast multiple votes, equal to the number of directors to be elected, to enhance minority shareholders’ influence in board appointments.

Write to Jong-Kwan Park and Jun-Ho Cha at pjk@hankyung.com
 


Yeonhee Kim edited this article.

US PE firm Miri Capital ups stake in Korea’s STIC Investments

US PE firm Miri Capital ups stake in Korea’s STIC Investments

US private equity firm Miri Capital Management LLC said on Tuesday it has raised its stake in STIC Investments Inc. to step up its shareholder activism against South Korea’s only listed PE firm.Miri Capital has increased its shareholding in STIC Investments to 11.54% as of April 11 from

STIC Investments draws activist interest, including Align Partners

STIC Investments draws activist interest, including Align Partners

Align Partners, founded in 2021, manages $530 million in assets, including funds under offshore advisory mandates STIC Investments Inc., South Korea’s only listed private equity firm, has become the latest target of shareholder activism as Seoul-based Align Partners Capital Management Inc

Parliament passes bill to expand boards’ fiduciary duties

Parliament passes bill to expand boards’ fiduciary duties

South Korea's National Assembly South Korea's National Assembly on Thursday passed an amendment to the Commercial Act to expand boards of directors’ fiduciary duties to minority shareholders. The move drew strong criticism from business leaders, who warn it would expose more companies, es

Korean activist investors to routinize campaigns throughout year

Korean activist investors to routinize campaigns throughout year

(Courtesy of Getty Images) South Korea’s activist investors are set to routinize campaigns all year long rather than launch fresh moves only before annual general meetings, investment banking industry sources said on Thursday.Many domestic activist funds this year plan to continue existin

Align Partners calls on Doosan Bobcat to boost shareholder value

Align Partners calls on Doosan Bobcat to boost shareholder value

Doosan Bobcat’s all-electric compact track loader T7X Align Partners Capital Management Inc., a South Korean activist fund, has called on Doosan Bobcat Inc., a global construction machinery maker owned by Doosan Group, to implement measures to boost its shareholder value.According to inve

Activist fund Palliser demands SK Square draw up value-boosting measures

Activist fund Palliser demands SK Square draw up value-boosting measures

SK Square's headquarters in Seoul UK-based activist fund Palliser Capital Ltd. is calling on SK Square Co., the investment arm of South Korea’s second-largest conglomerate SK Group, to implement corporate value-boosting measures, including increased share buybacks and heavier investment i

Activist fund KCGI to buy Hanyang Securities for $180 mn

Activist fund KCGI to buy Hanyang Securities for $180 mn

KCGI CEO Kang Sung-boo (File photo by Eun-Koo Kang) South Korean private equity firm KCGI Co. is expected to acquire local brokerage house Hanyang Securities Co. for 244.9 billion won ($179.8 million), but financial regulators may block the takeover over a potentially illegal practice in the de

Samsung C&T defeats activist funds in proxy battle

Samsung C&T defeats activist funds in proxy battle

Activist funds arm in arm to demand higher dividends from Samsung C&T Corp. got defeated in a proxy fight against the de facto holding firm of Samsung Group as the lion’s share of its shareholders sided with the company. During Samsung C&T’s annual shareholders’ meeti

Rise of Korean activist investors at home

Rise of Korean activist investors at home

As the annual general shareholders’ meeting season is approaching fast, publicly traded companies in South Korea are readying for a swath of proposals from activist funds, ranging from calls for changes in management or the board to increased dividend payments.According to the financial

KT&G faces another legal battle with Korean activist fund

KT&G faces another legal battle with Korean activist fund

KT&G's heat-not-burn product Lil Able series (Courtesy of KT&G) Singapore-based private equity firm Flashlight Capital Partners Pte. said Monday that it has filed court injunctions against KT&G Corp., beginning another legal battle against the world’s fifth-largest tobacco mak

Align Partners' shareholder activism? Think twice

Align Partners' shareholder activism? Think twice

Seoul-based Align Partners led successful shareholder activist campaigns The three-month saga over the control of the K-pop pioneer SM Entertainment Co. early this year was a painful lesson about activist funds: Don’t be fooled by their sweet talk.Activist funds, including billionaire Car

KT&G’s hidden saviors in activist fight: In-house funds

KT&G’s hidden saviors in activist fight: In-house funds

A KT&G tobacco production line in South Korea (Courtesy of KT&G) KT&G Corp., the world’s fifth-largest tobacco maker, will likely get support from in-house shareholders in a battle against activist funds with larger stakes than its top shareholder.The employee stock ownership

Activist fund Tcha Partners calls for Namyang Dairy to buy back shares

Activist fund Tcha Partners calls for Namyang Dairy to buy back shares

Namyang Dairy Products headquarters in Seoul Seoul-based activist fund Tcha Partners Asset Management Co. on Monday demanded that South Korea’s Namyang Dairy Products Co. buy back half of the shares owned by its retail investors, which equals 23.5% ownership of the company, at 820,000 won