Foreign investors now own more than 80% of KB Financial Group, Korea's largest financial holding company by net profit, the first time overseas ownership has crossed that threshold since the group was established in 2008. As of Thursday, offshore holders controlled 80.12% of the stock — more than 284.1 million shares — according to the Korea Exchange (KRX, Korea's bourse and market-data operator), the company said.
The milestone matters less as a sentiment headline than as a question of mechanics and control: what pushed ownership through 80%, whether it holds, and whether a foreign-dominated register reshapes the contest over Chairman Yang Jong-hee's bid for a second term.
How it got to 80%
The move is part flows, part arithmetic. KB retired 14,262,733 treasury shares — worth roughly ₩2.3 trillion ($1.7 billion at about ₩1,370 per dollar) — with the cancellation reflected on June 9, per Seoul Economic Daily. The Korea Times reports the move was first announced in April. Cancelling stock shrinks the share count, so a stable block of foreign holdings becomes a larger percentage of a smaller base. The company has also flagged an additional ₩600 billion ($438 million) buyback-and-cancellation plan.
Underneath the arithmetic is a genuine inflow. Foreign ownership rose from 72.22% at the end of 2023 to 77.09% at the end of 2024 before clearing 80% this month, according to Seoul Economic Daily. The publication tied the bid to Korea's "value-up" program — the government initiative launched to lift chronically undervalued, high-dividend stocks — with a KB IR executive saying the buying reflects a positive view of the firm's governance, accounting transparency and shareholder-return policies.
Far above its peers
KB's foreign ownership now sits well above the rest of Korea's banking majors: Shinhan Financial at 61.59%, Hana Financial at 68.37% and Woori Financial at 45.28%, per The Korea Times. That is a sharp break from the post-crisis pattern — the paper notes that foreign ownership across Korean banks largely settled into a 40–60% range for much of the past decade after global investors retreated following the 2008 financial crisis.
What it means for Yang
The register's foreign tilt arrives as KB runs its chairman-selection process. Yang Jong-hee's term expires November 12, 2026, and he is seeking reappointment. His tenure has coincided with a record performance: the group posted a record ₩5.843 trillion ($4.3 billion) net profit last year, and the share price has climbed from 54,600 won ($40) just before Yang took office to 156,600 won ($114) — a 186.8% gain, according to Seoul Economic Daily.
A heavily foreign register cuts both ways. It can underwrite an incumbent who has delivered total returns, but it also concentrates voting power with global institutions that lean on proxy advisers ISS and Glass Lewis — a dynamic Seoul Economic Daily flagged as raising concerns about outsized influence over board decisions.
The data points that settle it
Two near-term markers will test the thesis that foreign capital is both sticky and decisive. The first is KB's second-quarter result: The Korea Times reports an expected net profit of about ₩1.97 trillion ($1.4 billion), up roughly 15% year on year and a potential record quarter — the kind of print that keeps value-up flows in place. The second is the resolution of the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS, Korea's financial regulator) penalty tied to the equity-linked securities (ELS) mis-selling scandal, which The Korea Times says has been reduced to around ₩300 billion ($219 million) with room for further cuts. The binding signal, though, will be the board's formal nomination decision ahead of Yang's November term expiry.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Figures are sourced from The Korea Times and Seoul Economic Daily as cited; currency conversions use an approximate rate of ₩1,370 per U.S. dollar.
Sources: https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/business/banking-finance/20260619/foreigner-stakes-in-kb-financial-exceed-80-as-chairman-seeks-2nd-term, https://en.sedaily.com/finance/2026/06/11/kb-financial-nears-80-percent-foreign-ownership-a-double, https://en.sedaily.com/finance/2026/06/02/kb-financial-begins-ceo-selection-yangs-reappointment-in



