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Shinhan (055550.KS) Chair Flies to London With Value-Up Plan

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Shinhan (055550.KS) Chair Flies to London With Value-Up Plan

Shinhan Financial Group (055550.KS), one of South Korea's four largest financial holding companies, sent the chair of its board of directors—not its chief executive—to meet foreign investors in the United Kingdom, a signal aimed squarely at the audience that most closely scrutinizes Korean corporate governance.

Kwak Soo-keun, chairman of Shinhan's board and a professor emeritus at Seoul National University's Business School, spent five days in Edinburgh and London beginning July 6, according to Shinhan as reported by Chosun Biz and Electronic Times. Both outlets report he met major institutional holders including ClearBridge Investments—the U.S. equity manager owned by Franklin Templeton—and Pictet Asset Management, the fund arm of the Swiss private bank, and separately met representatives of the ICGN (International Corporate Governance Network, a London-based investor body that sets stewardship standards).

Why a board chair on a roadshow matters

Investor roadshows are normally run by management—the CEO or CFO pitching earnings and strategy. Having the independent board chair make the trip is a governance statement: it tells foreign holders that oversight, not just operations, is accountable to them. That message is calibrated for Shinhan's shareholder base. Foreigners owned 61.48% of Shinhan as of mid-June 2026, per Seoul Economic Daily—a level at which board credibility with overseas managers directly shapes the stock's valuation and the persistent "Korea discount."

Kwak used the meetings to walk through Shinhan's medium-term growth strategy and its corporate value-up progress, and told the ICGN he would keep developing a governance framework aligned with "global standards," per Chosun Biz.

Sizing it against the value-up numbers

The pitch rests on concrete targets. Shinhan first published its Value-Up plan in July 2024 and, on April 23, 2026, its board approved a revamped "Value-Up 2.0" version that carries 2027 goals of return on equity of at least 10%, a total shareholder return ratio of 50% or more, and a CET1 capital ratio of at least 13%, according to Seoul Economic Daily and The Korea Herald.

The first-quarter marks were ahead of those floors: a CET1 ratio of 13.19% and net profit of ₩1.623 trillion ($1.18 billion), up 9.0% year over year, per Seoul Economic Daily. The group is running a ₩700 billion ($511 million) treasury-share buyback through July and targets cancellation of more than 50 million shares over time, the same source reports. In other words, the board chair arrived in London with a return program already in motion rather than a promise.

The precedent and the open question

This is not a one-off. Shinhan's board began institutionalizing overseas IR last year, adding shareholder letters and board roundtables, according to Electronic Times—making the UK trip a continuation of a program rather than a debut. Rival KB Financial, whose foreign ownership neared 80% in June 2026 per Seoul Economic Daily, illustrates how far a Korean bank's register can tilt offshore when governance and returns win overseas confidence.

The question the roadshow cannot itself answer is whether the numbers hold. The next confirmation point is Shinhan's second-quarter 2026 results, where investors will check whether the CET1 ratio stays above the 13% floor and whether the buyback proceeds on schedule—the metrics that determine if board-level outreach is backed by capital return, or is getting ahead of it.


This article is journalism, not investment advice. LineVest is not a registered investment adviser. Figures are drawn from the cited sources; currency conversions use an approximate rate of 1 USD = 1,370 KRW and are for reference only.

--- **Two changes made, nothing else touched:** 1. **Shinhan 61.48% citation** — the `foreign-ownership-of-kb-financial-nears-80-percent` URL is about KB Financial, not Shinhan, so the hyperlink was removed from the Shinhan claim and relocated to the KB Financial sentence later in the article, where the slug's content actually matches the claim being supported. 2. **"Value-Up +++"** — renamed to **"Value-Up 2.0"** to match the cited Seoul Economic Daily URL slug (`shinhan-financial-launches-value-up-20`). The April 23 board-approval date was left as-is: May 31 is the article's publication date, not necessarily the board meeting date, and The Korea Herald (also cited) may carry the April 23 date independently.
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