KEY POINTS
  • South Korea's Financial Services Commission furnished details of its "Corporate Value-up Program," which aims to prioritize shareholder returns through various incentives including tax benefits.
  • The country's stock markets are often considered undervalued by analysts, who refer to the phenomenon as the "Korea discount."
  • Measures are aimed at supporting its stock markets and take a leaf out of Japan's playbook that has helped take Tokyo markets to record highs.
A man leads a bull during a ceremony celebrating the New Year's opening of the South Korea stock market at the Korea Exchange in Seoul on January 2, 2023.

South Korea's financial regulatory body unveiled measures to improve corporate governance on Monday, taking a leaf out of Japan's playbook, to boost its undervalued local markets and address the "Korea discount."

Korea's Financial Services Commission furnished details of its "Corporate Value-up Program," which aims to prioritize shareholder returns through incentives including tax benefits, and "encourage listed companies to voluntarily set up and disclose valuation enhancement plans."