A consortium led by North Asia-focused buyout firm MBK Partners edges closer to winning a battle for a control of Korea Zinc Inc. against the smelting company’s top management after it widened the shareholding gap, which industry watchers said looks difficult to be overturned.
After completing its tender offer for the world’s largest lead and zinc smelter in October, MBK and Young Poong Corp. together bought an additional 1.36% stake in the company for 292.0 billion won ($208 million) in the market, according to a regulatory filing on Monday by their special purpose company set up for the tender offer.
The MBK-Young Poong coalition has consequently increased their stake in Korea Zinc to 39.83% from 38.47% in October.
In terms of shares with voting rights, they control 45.42% of Korea Zinc after the latter’s share buybacks in October for retirement. Young Poong is the single largest shareholder in Korea Zinc.
The MBK-led group has continuously purchased Korea Zinc shares via NH Investment & Securities Co. It bought them at 1,034,400 per share on average, higher than its tender offer of 830,000 won.
By comparison, Korea Zinc Chairman Choi Yun-birm holds 17.01% of Korea Zinc shares, together with stakeholders and the US private equity firm Bain Capital after its buybacks last month.
Including the shares held by companies such as Hyundai Motor Co., LG Chem Ltd. and Hanwha Corp., who Choi claimed as his white knights, their combined shares with voting rights represents around a 40% stake.
That falls short of MBK-Young Poong alliance’s 45.42% stake by about five percentage points as of Nov. 11, wider than around three percentage points as of late last month.
Neither of them have failed to secure a majority of Korea Zinc in their separate tender ofers last month, though.
Industry watchers said the battle for a control of Korea Zinc will likely end up as MBK’s victory.
Even if the National Pension Service, believed to hold about a 4% stake in Korea Zinc, joins the smelter’s white knights, their combined stake will be still below that of the MBK-Young Poong consortium.
Other institutional and individual investors holding the remaining 8% of Korea Zinc shares could call the shots on the fight.
But they are unlikely to vote in favor of the company’s current management, who angered investors with the abrupt announcement of 2.5-trillion-won rights issues on Oct. 30.
It planned to use the proceeds to repay debts used for its share buybacks. But regulators put the brakes on the rights offering, finding fault with the process.
MBK is expected to call an extraordinary shareholder meeting of Korea Zinc no later than January next year to take a majority of board.
If the MBK-led group ultimately seizes control of Korea Zinc, it would mark its first success in a hostile takeover of a domestic company.
The takeover attempt is aimed at improving its governance and shareholder value, MBK founder and Chairman Michael ByungJu Kim told The Korea Economic Daily last week.
Korea Zinc’s share price was little changed at 1,134,000 won in morning trade.
By Jong-Kwan Park and Ji-Eun Ha
pjk@hankyung.com
Yeonhee Kim edited this article