Bangkok Post

‘DYNAMITE’ OPEN

- KANG JIN-KYU AFP

Shares of the management agency of K-pop sensation BTS soar in their market debut.

Shares in the management agency of K-pop sensation BTS rocketed on their stock market debut yesterday, making an instant billionair­e of its chairman and boosting the seven band members’ own fortunes.

The initial public offering of shares in Big Hit Entertainm­ent saw staggering demand, with the public section oversubscr­ibed more than 600 times and applicants receiving only a tiny fraction of their requests.

The firm’s centrepiec­e asset BTS have risen to global stardom in recent years, cementing their prominence in the United States, the world’s biggest music market, in August with their all-English track Dynamite topping the Billboard Hot 100.

The IPO price was set at 135,000 won ($118) but opened at double that on the Kospi exchange and within minutes spiked to its daily limit of 351,000 won, platforms showed.

It later fell back to close at 258,000 won but Big Hit still had a market capitalisa­tion of 8.7 trillion won — $7.6 billion — putting it among South Korea’s top 40 most valuable companies, just behind cosmetics-maker Amore Pacific and Hana Financial Group.

Big Hit founder and CEO Bang Sihyuk — who retains a 36% stake in the firm — was worth $3.8 billion at the peak, according to Bloomberg News.

At a listing ceremony, he thanked “all the fans who have always loved and believed in Big Hit’s artists and content” and “our remarkable artists of whom we’re so proud”.

The flotation also boosted the BTS members’ own wealth — Bang gave each of them more than 68,000 shares in August, worth around $20 million at the day’s high and totalling 1.4% of the company.

Analysts had expected the shares to power upwards.

“Considerin­g all the informatio­n about the firm now available, the IPO price could be the lowest price we will ever see,” Park Sung-ho of Yuanta Securities told AFP.

Some investors cashed in straight away. “I received two shares and just sold them. With 260,000 won in profit, I will just buy a winter coat,” said one poster on the South Korea’s biggest internet portal Naver.

Others warned it would continue to decline after the initial euphoria, with one comment reading: “The entertainm­ent industry is such a fast-changing sector and a management agency entirely dependent on only one group is not that attractive businesswi­se.”

There is one inescapabl­e hurdle looming for the newly listed agency: mandatory military service for all seven boy band members, who made their debut in 2013.

South Korea requires all ablebodied men to serve in uniform to defend it against security threats from the nuclear-armed North, usually for 18 months.

Under the existing conscripti­on laws, BTS member Jin — real name Kim Seokjin — aged 27, will have to report for duty by the end of 2021.

The other six members, born between 1993 and 1997, will have to follow in the coming years.

South Korea is currently debating exemptions for stars such as BTS, who have been at the forefront of the Korean Wave cultural phenomenon in recent years and are estimated to generate billions for the country’s economy.

Such dispensati­ons are available for Olympic medallists and award-winning classical musicians, but not for pop stars, with authoritie­s so far only considerin­g a two-year deferral.

Nearly 60% of South Koreans would support such a postponeme­nt, a survey showed yesterday, which would give BTS members only a temporary respite.

If they are forced to leave the stage it could blow a hole in Big Hit’s finances: BTS were responsibl­e for 97% of its revenues last year, according to the IPO prospectus.

Big Hit acknowledg­ed their anticipate­d absence as a “risk factor”.

It is looking to expand activities such as “contents licensing sales” that do not require the artists’ “direct participat­ion” to try to cushion the blow.

But it acknowledg­ed their time offcamera “could have a negative impact on the company’s profitabil­ity and growth”.

 ?? BIG HIT ENTERTAINM­ENT VIA AFP ?? In a handout photo taken and released by Big Hit Entertainm­ent shows executives posing for a photo during the company’s initial public offering ceremony at the Korea Exchange in Seoul yesterday.
BIG HIT ENTERTAINM­ENT VIA AFP In a handout photo taken and released by Big Hit Entertainm­ent shows executives posing for a photo during the company’s initial public offering ceremony at the Korea Exchange in Seoul yesterday.

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