Ly corp-backed LAAA to become Kakao Games' largest shareholder

An investment firm backed by Japan's LY Corp. will invest 300 billion won to become Kakao Games' largest shareholder. The deal is set to close in May, pushing Kakao to second place. Kakao Games aims to use the funds to boost global competitiveness.

Kakao Games announced in regulatory filings on Wednesday that LAAA Investment, backed by Japan's LY Corp., will acquire an undisclosed stake and purchase 240 billion won in new shares and 60 billion won in convertible bonds. The 300 billion won ($200.4 million) investment will make LAAA the largest shareholder upon closing in May, with current largest shareholder Kakao—holding 40.7 percent per The Korea Times or 37.6 percent per Yonhap—becoming second-largest. A Kakao Games official stated, “The latest investment decision is an important turning point for Kakao Games to improve its global competitiveness and strengthen the foundation for sustainable growth,” adding, “Based on cooperation between partners including Kakao and LY Corp., we will expand our opportunities in the global market.” LY Corp. operates Yahoo! Japan and the Line messaging app, popular in Japan and Southeast Asia. Kakao Games has reported operating losses for the past five quarters amid declining live service game sales, rising development costs, and restructuring of non-core businesses. Last year, it sold stakes in Sena Technologies and Kakao VX to focus on gaming. The company launched SMiniz, a K-pop puzzle game, in February and plans Odin: Q and ArcheAge Chronicles later this year. Kakao plans to reinvest part of the proceeds from the share sale to maintain its partnership and support stable operations.

Articles connexes

South Korean business leaders, led by KCCI Chairman Chey Tae-won, advocate for AI investments and public-private partnerships at a 2026 strategy conference.
Image générée par IA

South Korean business lobbies urge AI-led growth and stronger public-private ties in 2026

Rapporté par l'IA Image générée par IA

South Korea's leading business lobbies called for aggressive investments in artificial intelligence (AI) to secure global competitiveness in 2026. Chey Tae-won, chairman of the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI), emphasized building swift investment capabilities in AI and green sectors amid challenges like low growth and geopolitical uncertainties. Other groups highlighted the need for eased regulations and stronger public-private cooperation.

Savvy Games, propriété du fonds souverain d'Arabie saoudite, a conclu un accord avec ByteDance en vue d'acquérir Moonton Games pour 6 milliards de dollars. Cette opération constitue un nouvel investissement majeur de l'entité saoudienne dans l'industrie du jeu. Moonton, un développeur basé à Shanghai, est connu pour des jeux à succès tels que Mobile Legends : Bang Bang.

Rapporté par l'IA

Liquidnitro Games, basée à Hyderabad, a obtenu 19,1 millions de dollars en financement de série A pour développer sa plateforme de production de jeux propulsée par l'IA. Cette levée de fonds, menée par Northpoint Capital, soutiendra l'expansion sur des marchés émergents comme l'Inde, le MENA et l'Asie du Sud-Est. Fondée en 2023 par d'anciens vétérans d'Electronic Arts, la startup se concentre sur les services live pour les éditeurs mondiaux.

South Korea's internet giants Naver and Kakao, after overhauling their AI businesses in 2025, are accelerating efforts to redefine search and messaging services through agentic AI in 2026. Naver plans to integrate services via its Agent N, while Kakao focuses on a closed-loop ecosystem centered on KakaoTalk. Both aim for AI agents that understand user intent and execute tasks autonomously.

Rapporté par l'IA

South Korean stocks closed slightly higher on January 30, extending their winning streak to four sessions and hitting a new record high as investors bought artificial intelligence shares despite bubble concerns. The advance was capped by U.S. President Donald Trump's vow to impose higher tariffs on South Korea. The Korean won fell 13.2 won to 1,439.5 against the U.S. dollar.

The Korean unit of online retailer Coupang transferred more than 900 billion won ($620 million) in expenses to its US headquarters in 2024, according to an audit report. These related-party expenses, including service fees and royalties, totaled over 2.5 trillion won from 2020 to 2024. Tax authorities are investigating the transactions amid concerns over potential tax avoidance.

Rapporté par l'IA

Foreign investors have posted a net sale of around 9 trillion won ($6.2 billion) on South Korea's main bourse this year through last week. Analysts attribute the selling to cashing in on recent gains, particularly in chipmakers like Samsung Electronics. The benchmark KOSPI closed at an all-time high on Friday.

 

 

 

Ce site utilise des cookies

Nous utilisons des cookies pour l'analyse afin d'améliorer notre site. Lisez notre politique de confidentialité pour plus d'informations.
Refuser