This paper investigates the hostile takeover of SM Entertainment by Kakao, a landmark case in South Koreas entertainment industry. It explores how weak internal governance, founder override, and capital-driven strategies contributed to the takeover. The study examines the motivations behind the acquisition and illustrates the impacts of the takeover at the corporate level, market level, and institutional and legal levels. Data from company reports and media sources reveal that SMs internal governance deficiencies and Lee Soo-mans shadow control made it vulnerable to acquisition. While the merger enabled Kakao to expand its digital content ecosystem and strengthen its foothold in the entertainment market, both companies experienced short-term financial setbacks and reputation risks, exacerbated by legal investigations into alleged stock manipulation. This case underscores the need for stronger corporate governance frameworks and regulatory deterrence in creative industries. It contributes to the broader discourse on the economic, organizational, and institutional consequences of hostile takeovers in highly capitalized cultural sectors.
Ziyu Kuang (Tue,) studied this question.