Chapter 168 - All-out War, Part IV
12 Hours After
Translator: Khan
Editor: Aelryinth
My eyes were hot. I brought my hands to my eyes, rubbed them, and looked back at the table. There was a schematic on the table more complicated than a spiderâs web. This was a diagram of the Suyeon Group shares. Fifty companies with the name âSuyeonâ, such as Suyeon Electronics, Suyeon Chemical, Suyeon Life Insurance, and Suyeon Construction, were intertwined like an earphone put in a pocket. To that extent, I didnât know where to begin, so I raised my head and asked, âSo, who is the weakest link here?â
Vice President Jang, who was sitting beside me, answered, âThereâs no such thing as a weak link. In particular, the key pillars of the Group, such as electronics, chemicals, life insurance, construction, and shipbuilding are closely organized to defend their managerial rights, so they should be regarded as similar if we attack any side.â
âHmm... itâs not easy.â
âYes. In fact, the cross-shareholding structure of the nationâs large corporations is the work of the best scholars in Korea. Itâs designed to be a very stable structure. Even if other capital comes in and tries to reach out to the companyâs management, the other side can work together to keep it from happening.â
âI see...â
I nodded as I thought, âIf I pour out all forty-five billion dollars, weâll win. Of course, if I just try my best, they wonât be able to stop it.. The market capital of both Suyeon Chemical and Suyeon Electronics, which are twin-head carriages of Suyeon Group, is forty billion dollars. But then again, it is a painful victory. The price will go up in the process of buying. I can take ownership of the company, but in the process, I will make the other shareholders rich, including Tak Mun-su.â
I changed the question. âThen here. What if the current chairman, Tak Woo-kyung, dies? Is there a company that gets weak?â
Vice President Jangâs eyes changed with my question. He mumbled, alternately looking at his cell phone and schematic, âIf he does...â
The Suyeon group was largely divided into two groups: a company owned by his father, Tak Woo-kyung, and a company owned by his son, Tak Mun-su. Originally, Tak Woo-kyung had most of it, but over time, the stakes in the company controlled by Tak Mun-su gradually increased. In the meantime, there were ridiculous convertible bonds, mergers at the level of breach of shareholder value, and an unfair trade.
But they were all blindfolded by the previous administration, so Tak Mun-su somehow had half of the Suyeon Group without paying a penny of tax. It went on and on, right after the fall of Chairman Tak Woo-kyung.
âIf he dies, he wonât be able to use those.â
As I thought of that, Vice President Jang concluded. âThen, I think we should attack Suyeon Construction.â
Suyeon Construction was a company with 23% stake in Suyeon Electronics, and Tak Woo-kyung was a major shareholder.
âIf Chairman Tak Woo-kyung is dead, Tak Mun-su, who will receive the inheritance must pay tax in cash or in shares. But since there is no cash to pay, he has to pay it in shares, but he wonât be able to pay it with a stake in Suyeon Life Insurance, which he has a lot of. If Tak Woo-kyung controlled the Suyeon Group through Suyeon Construction, Tak Mun-su was designed to rule the group through Suyeon Life Insurance.â
I pointed to the arrows in the diagram and replied, âI see. If we go on a hostile M&A, if Tak Woo-kyung dies, Tak Mun-su will be forced to choose between construction-electronics or life-chemicals, right?â
âYes, boss.â
âThere, Tak Mun-su will lean toward protecting life and chemicals?â
âYes. In the first place, Tak Mun-su took over the Suyeon Life Insurance with tricks, and thatâs how he shifted the weight of the group towards life and chemistry. He would never give them up. So he is going to sell off the construction company that Tak Woo-kyung had, and the stake ratio on the construction and electronics side will be lowered.â
âOkay. Starting now, letâs have the directors buy Suyeon Construction and Suyeon Electronics quietly. At the same time, talk to the other major shareholders of Suyeon Construction and Suyeon Electronics.â
âYes, boss, by the way... this is all based on the premise that Tak Woo-kyung is dead. In his latest article, he is lying down and watching movies...â
I said after a pause, âHeâs already dead.â
âWhat?â
âYouâll find out in the next few days.â
âIs that true?â
I paused for a moment over his remark. âFacts change each moment. Some facts are near the truth, but they are denied, and some facts are close to lies but considered truth by the people who speak them.â
I said, tapping my chin, â... I will make it a reality.â
ââââââââ
In March 2021, I started a full-scale counterattack. First, I bought shares of Suyeon Construction and Suyeon Electronics in the most obvious way. In a very unobtrusive manner, I bought shares little by little at a level that was not very noticeable, that did not raise the stock price, and that was not met with the 5% reporting requirement. Then I moved using my personal account that I had kept for a while.
I bought shares of both companies, as Han Sang-hoon and as the owner of Invictus Investment. Suyeon Electronicsâ share price had fallen considerably due to the financial crisis in China. It was a big company, so it was a little less affected, but it had stayed at a fairly low price throughout the year, so there was no pressure to buy it.
âThe counterattack has begun. But weâre going to use harassing tactics to make sure they donât care about this.â
I also wrote editorials consistently through Oracle News. âHow long will we overlook the illegal inheritances of large corporations? We need to clean up the existing abuse.â
It was an editorial aimed right at Suyeon Life Insurance, and Tak Mun-suâs trick-using inheritance. Since Suyeon Group stopped advertising for Oracle News, it had now returned to them with the same. Of course, Suyeon Group would despise it, âOracle News? What kind of dog barks at us, itâs just a small pet.â However, they did not know that this was the news that the president was most attentive to.
ââââââââ
In the following April, the presidential office of the Blue House responded to the steady stream of editorials on Oracle News.
[We will reinvestigate the illegal inheritance of Suyeon life Insurance with the independent counsel.]
[Tax Investigation of Suyeon Construction]
A fire dropped on the foot of Tak Mun-su. In fact, for him, the fight with our company was basically a fight for pride. It was at the level of spending a little more money on Ullim Electronics... but this was a different problem. The independent counsel was a dangerous thing that could shake Tak Mun-suâs status, and once the tax investigation hit, the company itself reeled under the blow.
When I looked around the Internet community, the reaction was generally like this:
â President Joo Sung-won, you are doing good. Letâs clean up the existing abuse and build a just economy.-
â Suyeon Life Insurance was handed over too easily. We need to look into it properly this time.-
â Suyeon Construction was also famous. Rumor has it that the unit price was adjusted and the remaining money was received through borrowed-name accounts. Everyone in the industry knows about it.-
It seemed to be because President Joo Sung-won had a high approval rating and high popularity. Of course, like blue frogs, some people said other things...
â Whatâs going on? Was Tak Mun-su against President Joo Sung-won?-
â You know, there are companies that get beaten up in every administration. During Ko Jin-yongâs reign, the Taesoo Group was hit, and during the last Park Hyung-joon period, the Susung Group went back and forth to the Supreme Court. Maybe this time, it is the Suyeon Group.-
â But I guess thereâs something ugly in it. Didnât they give Joo Sung-won money for the presidential election?â
However, most of the comments were like this:
â President Joo Sung-won is a man of integrity, Suyeon Group deserves to be hit.-
Public opinion moved that way. I looked at it and thought, âI think President Joo Sung-won kept his loyalty this much. Or is he still afraid of the information I have?â
Either way, it was good. I was sure this had made it easier for me to attack. It was true even if we looked back at history. Not as much as during the former military dictatorship, but even after the military dictatorship, all the big businesses that seemed to be disliked by the government had been robbed. During the IMF era, the difference between survival and failure depended on whether they received subsidies from the government or not.
I bought shares of Suyeon Construction cheaply, even as the stock price collapsed in the face of the tax investigation, while calling for pleasure in my heart. âIf Tak Joon-gi is alive... he might have complimented me for being very good.â
Blowing up with bad news and picking up stocks cheaply⦠this was what my rival, Tak Joon-gi, used to use. He must have wanted to do this to prey on Tak Mun-su, his cousin. It was a little ironic that I, his enemy, was doing this, but life was ironic...
ââââââââ
In May, while shares of Suyeon Construction and Suyeon Electronics were being purchased and the independent counsel investigation of Suyeon Life Insurance was under way, I succeeded in building another bomb.
âMr. President, this is what you asked for.â I got a second piece of data from Crow.
âThank you. Crow, Iâve been so busy lately that I havenât even eaten chicken with you, but Iâll buy you a decent meal next time.â
âYouâre welcome.â
â
The second data was on Hong Yong-pyo, Tak Woo-kyungâs doctor. The first report showed how he disguised the death of Tak Woo-kyung, and kept it secret, but I had Crow dig into him further, because I thought it was necessary to target this person if I published a sure article.
The second report looked into how he, a medical science professor at Seoul National University, left school and took office as head of the Suyeon Medical Foundation Hospital, what he did, how he exploited his medical residents and pocketed bribes during his previous years as a professor, and how many times and where he went to salon rooms.
After I put it all together, I made a phone call to make all of this a fact. âItâs been a long time, CEO Lee Won-jae.â
âAh yes, CEO Han.â But his voice was begrudging when he answered my phone.
âWell, do you still think Iâm screwed?â
âOh, no. What are you talking about?â By his denial, I seemed to have hit the mark.
â... yes, anyway. Iâm calling because I need your strength again. Itâs about... the death of Tak Woo-kyung.â
âPardon me?â He was surprised.
âYes, of course, itâs a huge bomb for Suyeon Group. But this is a fact like the last request. Iâll send you some data that can reassure you.â
âBut... no matter how much it is a fact, itâs...â He, too, was afraid to fuck the Suyeon Group openly.
âItâs the last step. If this is successful, half of the Suyeon Group will be mine. Then, Iâll visit your father and persuade him that Lee Won-jae will be the next CEO of the Daewon Daily News.â
âBut this is... too dangerous. If I do this and something is wrong, I...â
âCEO Lee Won-jae, weâre already in the same boat, and the wind is blowing in our direction. You know, Suyeon Group is under the tax investigation by the independent counsel. Are you going to get off here when the fair wind is blowing?â
â...â He forgot to speak for a moment. Perhaps he was still affected by the rumor that Han Sang-hoon was doomed.
âCEO Lee Won-jae, Iâll give you a choice.â
âWhat...?
âYou can trust me and send out an article now. Or, you can get my fax and send out an article then. There is no option not to publish an article. Itâs one of the two.â
âYes?â
âMaybe youâll see.â As I said that, I took a document out of the drawer: âReport on the status of profits from investment in China.â
âIf you look at this, youâll publish an article that I want.â It was the very document that showed forty-five billion dollars in revenue.
I spoke with the document in my hand. âItâs your choice. Jesus said so in the Bible. He was resurrected three days after his death, and said, âI will give a great reward to those who believe in me without seeing me, and a small reward to those who try to put their hands on my waist.â What are you going to do? Shall I send you a fax or not?â
After much trouble, he said, âI just believe you. Iâll publish it as soon as you send me the source.â
I said with a satisfied smile, âYes, then Iâll e-mail you the contents. Write them down quickly and let it go.â
âYes, CEO Han.â