Korea's second-largest hypermarket chain edged closer to dissolution on July 3 after a Seoul court terminated its corporate rehabilitation proceedings, ruling that Homeplus had failed to secure the minimum funding required to carry out its restructuring plan.
Court Ruling: KRW 200B Threshold Unmet
The Seoul Bankruptcy Court's fourth rehabilitation division rejected Homeplus' revised rehabilitation plan, submitted on June 30, citing a failure to raise at least KRW 200 billion (approximately USD 145 million) in debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing. "The minimum funding required to implement the plan has yet to be secured," the court stated in its ruling. "As the proposal is therefore not feasible, the rehabilitation proceedings will be terminated without further hearings."
The decision came 16 months after Homeplus, wholly owned by private equity firm MBK Partners, filed for court-led rehabilitation in March 2025. The company had submitted an initial restructuring proposal in December 2025 before presenting a revised plan on June 30, 2026.
14-Day Lifeline
The court left a narrow window open: Homeplus has 14 days — until approximately July 17 — to appeal the ruling. For the appeal to succeed, the company must secure the KRW 200 billion and demonstrate a credible funding plan. Industry observers view the odds as slim.
Within hours of the ruling, shelves at multiple Homeplus locations were being cleared of inventory as suppliers began reclaiming goods. Store employees described scenes of confusion and distress as product removal began mid-business day.
MBK vs. Meritz: A Funding Standoff
The rehabilitation's collapse reflects a months-long impasse between MBK Partners and Meritz Financial Group, Homeplus' largest creditor. MBK, which acquired Homeplus from British retail group Tesco in 2015 for approximately KRW 7.2 trillion (then roughly USD 5.7 billion), has consistently favored providing credit guarantees rather than direct cash injections. Meritz Financial, holding a substantial portion of Homeplus' secured debt, has pressed MBK to inject equity capital first.
The Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) is reported to have approved significant disciplinary sanctions against MBK Partners in connection with its management of the Homeplus investment — one of the most consequential regulatory actions against a Korean private equity firm to date.
Scale of Disruption
With approximately 130 stores across Korea and an estimated 10,000–12,000 direct employees, a Homeplus liquidation would rank among the largest corporate collapses in Korean retail history. Including suppliers, franchise partners, and contracted workers, trade unions estimate up to 100,000 livelihoods directly at stake.
Two major labor unions — the Homeplus General Labor Union and the Mart Industry Labor Union — have called for emergency government intervention, demanding KRW 200 billion in public funds within 14 days. The government has not committed to a rescue package.
Retail Sector Implications for KOSPI Investors
Homeplus generated an estimated KRW 5–6 trillion (USD 3.6–4.4 billion) in annual revenues at its peak. Its exit from the market — through liquidation or rapid store closures — would redistribute a significant consumer spending pool across Korea's big-box retail sector.
The primary beneficiaries are expected to be: - E-Mart (139480.KS), operated by Shinsegae Group, Korea's largest hypermarket operator with approximately 155 stores - Lotte Shopping (023530.KS), which operates Lotte Mart's roughly 110 locations with regional overlap across many Homeplus sites
The retail real estate vacated by Homeplus — located in high-traffic suburban and mid-city corridors — could trigger a wave of property transactions and lease renegotiations.
Meritz Financial Group (138040.KS), the largest creditor, faces investor scrutiny regarding its recovery rate on Homeplus secured debt. While the company's overall capital position has not been flagged as impaired by regulators, the magnitude of potential write-downs warrants monitoring.
Key Figures
| Item | Figure |
|---|---|
| Min. DIP funding required | KRW 200B (~USD 145M) |
| MBK acquisition price (2015) | ~KRW 7.2T (~USD 5.7B) |
| Homeplus stores | ~130 |
| Direct employees | ~10,000–12,000 |
| Appeal deadline | ~July 17, 2026 |
| E-Mart stores (KOSPI: 139480) | ~155 |
| Lotte Mart stores (KOSPI: 023530) | ~110 |
What Comes Next
If the appeal deadline passes without a resolution, Homeplus will enter formal bankruptcy proceedings, with creditors — led by Meritz Financial — likely pursuing asset seizures and store-by-store liquidation. The National Assembly has called for separate hearings on the role of private equity firms in managing large Korean employers.
The Homeplus case is set to become a landmark test of how Korean courts and regulators respond when leveraged buyouts backed by global PE capital result in mass job losses and creditor losses — a question with implications well beyond the retail sector.
Sources: Korea Times · Korea Times · Chosunbiz · MK Economy · Yonhap · Hankyung · ETNews



