Bang Si-hyuk, the founder and chairman of HYBE and the man largely responsible for influencing the global K-pop movement through BTS, may be facing his greatest obstacle to date.
According to The Korea Times, South Korean police, prosecutors, and financial authorities are currently looking into the well-known producer and businessman for allegedly engaging in alleged unfair share trading related to HYBE's 2020 IPO.
At the heart of the probe is a serious question — did Bang hide HYBE’s IPO plans from early investors, using a private fund connected to a close friend to make massive profits before the company went public?
Authorities allege the fund earned over 100 billion won ($73 million), while HYBE maintains the gains were the result of “business judgment and luck,” not deceit.
Bang had first mentioned the possibility of taking HYBE public as early as 2017, telling Bloomberg that he was in discussions with investors such as Legend Holdings and LB Investment.
By 2019, the company had already begun its formal preparations — requesting a designated audit from the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS), a move often seen as a clear step towards an IPO. HYBE finally debuted on the KOSPI in October 2020.
The controversy lies in what happened just before that. Some early shareholders sold their stakes to Stick Investment and Eastone Equity Partners for around 30,000 to 40,000 won per share — long before the stock’s IPO price shot up to 135,000 won, and later to 258,000 won on its first day of trading.
Investigators believe that a letter sent by HYBE assuring shareholders that there were “no immediate plans for an IPO” was misleading, especially since the audit application suggested otherwise.
Also Read: BTS’s Jungkook’s dog Instagram flooded with hate amid dating rumours with aespa’s Winter
Complicating the matter further, Eastone Equity Partners — one of the funds that bought those shares — was founded by Kim Joong-dong, a long-time acquaintance of Bang.
Police suspect Bang encouraged Kim to establish the fund to discreetly purchase shares, later benefiting through a 30 percent profit-sharing deal. HYBE, however, insists that the investment was a last-minute attempt to stabilise the company when other investors backed out due to uncertainty over BTS’ future and the group’s military service plans.
Investigators say Bang’s profit-sharing arrangement should have been disclosed in HYBE’s official filings, calling the omission a violation of financial law.
HYBE argues the agreement wasn’t intentionally concealed and that earlier investors still profited before the IPO.
With Bang questioned twice and placed under a travel ban, the case now sits at a critical point.
Discover the latest Business News, Sensex, and Nifty updates. Obtain Personal Finance insights, tax queries, and expert opinions on Moneycontrol or download the Moneycontrol App to stay updated!
Find the best of Al News in one place, specially curated for you every weekend.
Stay on top of the latest tech trends and biggest startup news.