South Korea Tightens Dual-Listing Rules, Expands Oversight to 5 Parent Company Obligations

According to the Financial Services Commission, South Korea today (July 6) released new guidelines on dual-listing that strengthen regulatory oversight. Listed companies pursuing subsidiary listings must now fulfill five obligations: assessing dual-listing impacts on minority shareholders, implementing shareholder protection measures, confirming shareholder consent, making final resolutions, and disclosing relevant information.

The guidelines expand oversight scope beyond traditional spin-offs to include non-listed subsidiaries under substantive control, as well as acquisitions, newly formed entities, and special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) mergers. Market analysts expect the stricter rules to reduce valuation discounts for conglomerates and complex enterprises, as subsidiary values will now be fully reflected in parent company valuations rather than double-counted in the market.

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