Chapter 170 - All-out War, Part VI
12 Hours After
Translator: Khan
Editor: Aelryinth
Vice President Jang handed me the report. I lifted and read t. However, before I saw the amount in the report, he told me first, âWe have 4.26%, 871.5 million dollars in Suyeon Construction, 3.66%, 1.158 billion dollars in Suyeon Electronics.â
The figures were correct, and the exact amount was written in the report.
âI see. Thereâs been a lot of news lately for the Suyeon Group, so itâs been a good buy, hasnât it?â
âYes, sir.â
I just nodded as I listened. I didnât say anything like âYes, we were going to buy it, and we were lucky.â
Itâd already been four years since Jang was with me. After our company bought a companyâs stock and waited, a stream of good news came out. On the other hand, before we tried to buy something, bad news came out one after another.
In the first year or two, he might have thought, âOh, my boss is luckyâ, but after four years of watching it, he must have known that Iâd planned and implemented all of these things. After all, I had asked him, âWhen Tak Woo-kyung dies, where do we attack?â Therefore, Vice President Jang would have had no choice but to realize that I had ordered Daewon Daily News to publish the news. But I didnât say anything about it, nor did Vice President Jang ask me about it. He was quick-witted. He didnât ask anything that would make me uncomfortable.
âWe have bought more than 3% of both stocks, have they noticed anything about it?â
âThereâs been so much trading for the past few days⦠But if they kept a close eye on it, they would probably know that there was buying in bulk at a certain branch. However, they would not know it was us.â
I pondered the words. âThey would not know it was us. Reallyâ¦?â
âOkay. Letâs just buy it up to five percent anyway.â
âYes, boss.â
âFive percent is important because there is a requirement for disclosure of the majority shareholder when a company holds more than five percent of the shares in another company. This is an important juncture, whether for hostile M&As or for general investment. âWho owns five percent of this companyâ is a factor that moves stock prices. Most of the time, when they make a general investment, they tend to go in openly advertising, âIâm going in. Iâll buy this. Iâll buy more from now on.â In public announcements, when the notice, âThis is a five percent stake purchased by a super ant,â comes out, other ants rush in saying, âThat stock should be good,â and the stock price goes up.
âItâs a kind of halo-effect trading method, not only for the popular super ants in our country, but also for Warren Buffett and other world-famous investors. I donât know if it is intended. In contrast to this case, hostile M&As are very quiet and unnoticed.
âIf the story âSomeone is seeking the management rights of this company. Now that heâs bought five percent, he is likely to buy ten or twenty percent,â goes around, ants, institutions, foreigners, and others can all buy together and raise stock prices. Of course, when I get out of there, I can get money by stabbing other people in the back, but what I want now is not money, but the ownership of Suyeon Electronics and Suyeon Construction, which I can use to jump to the Grandmaster Class in one move.â
âSo, have you talked to other major shareholders? Did you contact RMI?â
âRMI stands for Red Moss Investment. As a global hedge fund, it is famous for quietly buying shares if a company is in crisis, and selling it at high prices when the company is normalized.â
In the case of Suyeon Electronics, when the stock price staggered during the 2008 financial crisis, it really got stuck like a moss at that time, buying a seven percent stake and keeping it so far. It was the second largest shareholder after Suyeon Construction, which had an eleven percent stake.
When Suyeon Electronics said, âWeâd like to appoint Tak Jun-won as managing director,â these people had voted against it saying, âHe is from Takâs family and he is too related to the group. We are against the plan.â When Suyeon Electronics had said, âWeâll give you a dividend of three percent, since this yearâs operating profit is good,â they countered them by saying, âThree percent is too small. Letâs do four percent.â They had been irritating to the Suyeon Group.
But the enemyâs enemies were allies, and if I gave them money, they were very likely to be on my side. In the first place, hedge funds were ones who pursued money without everlasting allies or enemies at the gambling table.
Jang answered, âIâm in a quiet contact without first showing our intentions to buy. But⦠if they find out weâre looking for management rights, theyâll probably make it very expensive.â
âHmm⦠Okay. But letâs have a reasonable approach to buy unless itâs too expensive.â
âYes, boss.â
âIf I buy five percent in the market and seven percent from RMI, I become a major shareholder, beating the eleven percent of Suyeon Construction. After RMI, the National Pension Service has about three percent, and it is likely to take my side, or at least stay neutral, as the president appoints the chairman of the National Pension Service. If I write an article to the effect of, âThe National Pension Service managing the money of the people should focus on profitability, without an appraising look of a large company,â theyâll know and behave like that by themselves.â
âThen letâs talk about the construction side. Tak Woo-kyung has over twenty percent here. Wouldnât it be possible to attack a little further until the inheritance tax payment starts?â
âThatâs right, but Tak Mun-suâ¦â
At that time, the telephone rang. I raised my hand, asked for permission from Vice President Jang, and answered the phone. âWhat is it? I told you not to call me when I am talking to Vice President Jang.â
Secretary Park answered as he was scolded, âI called you because it was a big thing. I was thinking you and Vice President Jang should listen.â
âWhat is it?â
âVice Chairman Tak Mun-su of Suyeon Group says heâll come here himself.â
âHeâll come here himself?â
When I said that, Vice President Jang was also quite surprised.
âYes.â
âWhen?â
âHe wants to see you as soon as possible, when you have time.â
I thought for a moment, âHmm⦠Does he think the fire is on his foot now? He seems to be in a corner and trying to negotiate.â I didnât mean to make a deal. But I wanted to meet him and see how embarrassed he was. âIf he comes and kneels down, I can be a little generous with the rest of the company.â
âWell⦠weâre not going to have lunch together⦠Tell them to come tomorrow afternoon at about three oâclock, after we finish eating and digesting.â
âYes, I see.â
I put the phone down and told Vice President Jang, âDid you hear that?â
â⦠yes. The vice chairman of Suyeon Group, Tak Mun-su, is comingâ¦ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
â⦠thatâs right.â
Vice President Jang stared at me, but he didnât open his mouth, even if he had a lot of questions to ask:
âHow do you know Vice Chairman Tak Mun-su?â
âIs it related to this takeover?â
âWhy is Tak Mun-su coming all of a sudden?â
In any case, his patience was good. I muttered to him, âThe vice chairman of a large company is coming by himself, so he must be in a hurry.â
Still, he didnât ask me about personal matters. He only asked about things related to this work. âWell, do you think tomorrowâs meeting can bring about a change in our companyâs keynote?â
I answered him firmly, âNo. Whether I meet him or not, we do our job. Tomorrowâs meeting is going to be a private one.â
After I replied, Vice President Jang lowered his head and said, âYes, sir!â
âââââââ-
The next day, 2 p.mâ¦
I had Seolleongtang for lunch with Secretary Park and talked to him on my way back to work. âSecretary Park, do you remember what happened in the old days? I told you when Tak Joon-gi came here that the guy who was coming to our company today is my enemy.â
Apparently, at that time, I said: At eleven oâclock, thereâll be someone who looks like a very skinny person, and who seems to have ditched money from head to foot. Heâs my enemy.
Secretary Park remembered that. âYes. I remember, boss.â
âItâs my enemy who is coming today; Tak Mun-su, chairman of Suyeon Group.â
âI was guessing.â
âI just happen to be enemies with the Tak family.â
âIf we look at the novels of martial arts or something like that, itâs common to take revenge for relatives.â
âOh, yes, butâ¦â
I thought in my heart when I said that, âThe relationship between the relatives was not very good.â
Their relationship was actually quite bad. Even Tak Mun-su was the one who had killed Tak Joon-gi. Tak Mun-su didnât start the war with me because of Tak Joon-giâs vengeance. If I thought about it, I would have to say that I was trying to get revenge for Tak Joon-gi.
âOh, my God. I am still connected to Tak Joon-gi even when he is dead. Heâs already dead, and heâs probably in Hell, but Iâd like to meet and talk to him again if I had the chance, about his cousin, Tak Mun-su.â
âââââââ-
Around 2:50 a.m. following, the waiting call rang.
âBoss, Vice Chairman Tak Mun-su of Suyeon Group is here.â
âLet him in after searching for concealed weapons.â
In fact, Tak Mun-su didnât even have a knife in his pocket, but if he had, it would have already come out on the future news.
âWhat the fuck is going on?â
âItâs the bossâs order.â
âThatâs okay. Director Kim, stay calm.â
There was a brief high noise outside, but after a while, Tak Mun-su opened the door and came in with Secretary Park. I got up from my seat and greeted Tak Mun-su.
âWelcome, Vice Chairman Tak, youâve come to this place while youâre quite busy.â
Tak Mun-su stared at me. âWhile youâre busyâ meant an independent counsel who had started the special investigation. But there was nothing he could do except stare at me.
Park, standing in the back, spoke coercively, âWhen I said that I was going to search Vice Chairman Tak Mun-su, the directors of Suyeon Group hated that, and there was a bit of noise.â
âAha, I see. You should be a little gentle.â
âI did it gently.â
I put Tak Mun-su in the middle and had a conversation with Secretary Park like that. I neglected him in his presence. But then I offered him a seat. âSit down, Mr. Vice Chairman.â
This way, I remembered the time when Tak Joon-gi had come to our company. At that time, the building was not in Samseong-dong, but Nonhyeon-dong, which we used to rent out, but the situation was the same. Tak Joon-gi had been hit by me, and had come and told me, âLetâs make a truce.â
âCousins are doing the same.â I looked at Tak Mun-su with such thoughts. He was staring at me as if he would kill me. I said to him with a real smile. âSo you wanted to see me⦠What brings you here, Vice Chairman?â