Activist Retail Investors Take On Korea’s Corporate Laggards

(Bloomberg) -- South Korea’s small investors are trying to shake up the country’s creaky corporate landscape.

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Amateur stock-pickers across the country are gathering on social media platform KakaoTalk and dedicated shareholder apps such as Act, which has racked up more than 110,000 users in the two years since it launched. Their aim: to give a jolt to Korea’s $1.9 trillion stock market, which has for years traded at cheaper multiples than regional rivals like Japan and Taiwan.

“Korea’s financial system lags global standards and companies need to be held accountable,” said Younghee Won, a 66-year-old art instructor and amateur investor. “Online platforms allow our anger to translate into action.”

This wave of grass-roots activism means Korea’s listed companies are now being pressured from all sides, as politicians, regulators and foreign investment funds push for better governance. That may finally force local companies to address the long-standing “Korea discount” — adding fuel to a stock market that is already one of the world’s best performers so far this year.

It has also turned small investors into a surprising political force. Lee Jae-myung, the left-leaning politician who won the country’s presidential election last week, tried to position himself as a champion for shareholders, promising to lift corporate governance standards, curb stock manipulation and set the Kospi index on the path to 5,000 — almost 80% higher than its current level.

The Kospi entered a bull market after Lee’s election win and was around 1.7% higher in early Asian trading on Monday.

The market is getting a boost from foreign funds loading up on stocks, and rising optimism from Wall Street. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. strategists said in a weekend note they were upgrading Korean stocks to overweight from neutral, pointing to the increased likelihood of capital market reforms.

Read: Goldman Upgrades Korean Stocks to Overweight on Domestic Boost

Growing Clout

Retail investors in Korea now represent almost 30% of the overall population, according to Goldman Sachs. A boom in stock trading during the Covid-19 pandemic led to millions of new account openings, fueling the rise of online communities where they could learn about stock picking — and hatch plans.

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