Asia Markets

South Korean boy band BTS’s label makes a strong debut in ‘really hot’ IPO market

Key Points
  • Shares of Big Hit Entertainment, the music label of K-pop superstars BTS, ended their first trading day in South Korea more than 90% higher than their issue price.
  • South Korea's entertainment sector will be a "very important industry" for investors as it goes global, says Yuanta Securities Korea's Daniel Yoo.

In this article

    How K-pop band BTS generates billions of dollars for South Korea
    VIDEO12:0512:05
    The business of BTS

    SINGAPORE — Shares of Big Hit Entertainment, the music label of K-pop superstars BTS, soared as they made their market debut in South Korea on Thursday.

    Big Hit Entertainment's stock opened at 270,000 Korean won (approx. $236) per share on Thursday, according to Refinitiv Eikon. That was double the stock's issue price of 135,000 Korean won per share. Shares extended gains after the open before weakening. It finished its first trading day more than 90% higher than its issue price.

    South Korea's entertainment sector is "becoming global-scale," Daniel Yoo, head of global investment at Yuanta Securities Korea, told CNBC's "Squawk Box Asia" on Thursday.

    If you look at the overall IPO market, it's really, really hot.
    Daniel Yoo
    Yuanta Securities Korea

    "We think that the entertainment industry will be very important industry for Korea for investor(s) to invest," Yoo said.

    Still, the analyst admitted that Big Hit Entertainment's current valuation "might be too expensive" as its present dependency on the South Korean seven-member boyband BTS is "very high."

    South Korea's 'hot' IPO market

    Big Hit Entertainment's market debut came on the back of other blockbuster IPOs such as SK Biopharmaceuticals and Kakao Games that also saw big jumps on their first day of trading.

    "If you look at the overall IPO market, it's really, really hot," Yoo said. Most investors in previous public listings such as SK Biopharmaceuticals "made anywhere between 100-200% returns on the presubscription if they can get the stocks," he added.

    Part of this was due to the "huge liquidity" being observed in the South Korean markets, he said.

    The Bank of Korea currently has its base rate at a historic low at a time when major central banks globally have slashed interest rates in a bid to support financial markets during the coronavirus pandemic.