Crisis kickstarts corporate revolution

© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 161 Farringdon Rd, London EC1R 3AL. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions | Cookies

Crisis kickstarts corporate revolution

The overhaul of the Korean corporate and financial sectors that is starting to gather pace promises to be brutal and bloody. And it will involve many high-profile casualties. But only drastic action can put the country back on its feet after the traumatic events of the past year and rebuild international confidence. President Kim Dae-Jung's radical reform programme will trigger a complete restructuring of the corporate and financial systems. What the government hopes will evolve is a dynamic new economic model for Korea. But it will come at a high price and it will not be achieved without strong opposition. As this sea change sweeps through Korea, the opportunities for foreign commercial bankers, investment banks and corporate, venture capital and portfolio investors will be enormous. But the risks are high. Mark B Johnson reports on a country on the brink of an explosion of corporate bankruptcies and, if the government's radical reforms are derailed, a country on the brink of financial meltdown.

Unlock this article.

The content you are trying to view is exclusive to our subscribers.

To unlock this article:

Request demo or Login
  • 4,000 annual insights
  • 700+ notes and long-form analyses
  • 4 capital markets databases
  • Daily newsletters across markets and asset classes
  • 2 weekly podcasts

Related articles

  • SSA

    The countdown to SSAs pricing through Treasuries

    The pick-up that sovereign, supranational and agency dollar bonds offer over US Treasuries has collapsed in two years, GlobalCapital’s Primary Market Monitor shows. As triple-A rated supras close in on pricing flat to the US government benchmark, bankers are no longer asking whether a deal can be priced through Treasuries, but when, writes Sarah Ainsworth
  • SSA

    ‘Remarkably resilient’ euro SSA market powers through turbulent year so far

    Public sector issuers have sailed through a volatile first five months of 2026, despite renewed inflation and growth concerns, writes Addison Gong. Their ability to adjust to higher yields and shorter demand ensured investors devoured a large slug of issuance laying a solid foundation for the rest of the year
  • SSA

    Roundtable: Hong Kong combines private placement and public issuance to drive bond success

    The Hong Kong dollar bond market is evolving beyond being one exclusively of private placements to one where public issuance of varying sizes and maturities is becoming more common. The greater frequency of public issuance is leading to more opportunities for investors and issuers alike. Sustaining this growth will require a bigger variety of asset classes, and more diversified local and international participation. GlobalCapital assembled a group of investors and issuers from across the bond market to discuss this burgeoning market and the progress they want to see from it in the future.
  • Japan corporate bond onslaught to ramp up offshore as size, tenors appeal

    High-yield Japanese corporate bond issuers are set to step up their offshore bond issuance plans in 2026 amid a push to diversify their funding sources. They are likely to see success in dollars and euros provided market conditions hold up, writes Rashmi Kumar
  • Roundtable: Japan’s SSAs focus on flexible strategy, short tenor bonds to navigate choppy markets

    Japan’s sovereign, supranational and agency (SSA) borrowers continue to be among the most highly regarded issuers in global debt markets, supported by strong credit fundamentals and deep domestic demand. But with a complex geopolitical background, diverging global monetary policies, the Bank of Japan’s policy signals, and recent elections in the country, issuers are operating in an unpredictable environment.
  • SSA

    Sovereign issuers roundtable: Getting ahead of the steepening curve

    The first half of the year was an eventful and volatile one in the government bond market, and the second half threatens more uncertainty. Sovereign issuers are dealing with steeper curves as investors demand higher term premia. Meanwhile, deficit dynamics are shifting, especially as some countries face up to higher defence and infrastructure spending. GlobalCapital gathered senior funding officials from the EU, Greece, Ireland, Italy and Portugal in June in London to discuss how their funding plans had fared so far, how they are developing their investor bases and how they plan to tackle the uncertainties that lie ahead.
Gift this article