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Tuesday, June 30, 2026
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JoongAng Group's Five Affiliates Enter Court Rehabilitation as JTBC's ₩700 Billion Sports-Rights Bet Unravels

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JoongAng Group's Five Affiliates Enter Court Rehabilitation as JTBC's ₩700 Billion Sports-Rights Bet Unravels

At a Glance

South Korea's JoongAng Group, whose media portfolio spans cable broadcaster JTBC, newspaper JoongAng Ilbo, multiplex chain Megabox, and entertainment studio SLL JoongAng, has entered simultaneous creditor-led and court-led restructuring after a USD 500 million commitment for exclusive sports broadcasting rights triggered a liquidity collapse.

JTBC declared a default on ₩20.6 billion (USD 13.6 million) in securitized loans on June 12, 2026. Within days, five group affiliates filed court-led rehabilitation petitions, and on June 19 the flagship newspaper filed a separate creditor-led workout application with primary lender Hana Bank — marking one of the largest media-sector insolvencies in Korean history.


What Triggered the Crisis

In 2022–2023, JoongAng Group signed contracts worth a combined USD 500 million (approximately ₩700 billion at execution) to secure exclusive South Korean broadcasting rights for:

  • The Summer and Winter Olympics from 2026 through 2032, and
  • The FIFA World Cup through 2030.

The strategy assumed JTBC could sublicense rights to Korea's three terrestrial broadcasters (KBS, MBC, SBS) and recoup its outlay through premium advertising. The plan unravelled in February 2026, when JTBC failed to sell Winter Olympics sublicensing rights to the terrestrial networks. KBS has since agreed to broadcast the events but is absorbing losses on its side.

Unable to offset the rights bill, JTBC missed a ₩20.6 billion repayment on June 12, setting off a credit-rating cascade. By June 16, multiple JoongAng entities had been downgraded to D-grade (default level) by domestic rating agencies.


Cascade of Filings

DateEntityAction
Jun 12JTBCDefault on ₩20.6B securitized loan
Jun 14–15JTBC, JoongAng Holdings, Contentree JoongAng, Megabox JoongAng, JoongAng P&ICourt-led rehabilitation petitions filed
Jun 16Multiple group entitiesCredit agencies downgrade to D-grade
Jun 19JoongAng IlboCreditor-led workout filed (Hana Bank); Hanyang Securities demanded early repayment of ₩22B commercial paper

JoongAng Ilbo stated it would pursue "debt restructuring in a fair and consistent manner for all creditors," following a press conference at which individual investors demanded leadership resignations.


Private Equity Exposure: ~₩500 Billion at Risk

The group attracted significant PE/VC capital during a content-market boom. All four major investors now face uncertain exits:

  • Praxis Capital — ₩300 billion in SLL JoongAng convertible preferred shares (2021 pre-IPO round, 18.36% stake). A planned IPO was the primary exit route; that IPO is now indefinitely delayed.
  • Tencent-affiliate Aceville — ₩100 billion invested alongside Praxis in the same transaction.
  • JKL Partners — ₩80 billion in Contentree JoongAng CBs (original ₩100B, partially repaid 2024), now grown to approximately ₩120 billion including interest.
  • Korea Investment PE — ₩30 billion in Contentree JoongAng privately placed CBs (2025), predicated on improved content production.

Court rehabilitation proceedings will determine whether CB repayment schedules are restructured and whether a partial asset sale or IPO restart for SLL JoongAng remains viable as a going concern.


Sector Implications

The collapse raises structural questions for mid-sized Korean broadcasters that bid aggressively for exclusive sports rights without the balance-sheet depth to absorb sublicensing failures. JTBC's predicament mirrors pressures seen in other markets where streaming platforms outbid traditional broadcasters for live-sports inventory.

For Korean private equity, the event underscores the concentration risk in K-content bets: Praxis Capital and Aceville alone have ₩400 billion committed to a single content group whose primary IPO exit has evaporated. Court assessments of SLL JoongAng's going-concern value will be closely watched by the broader PE community tracking K-content valuations.


Sources

  • Korea Herald — "JoongAng Ilbo applies for debt workout program, pledges restructuring efforts" (Jun 20, 2026)
  • Korea Times — "JoongAng Ilbo files for creditor-led workout program" (Jun 19, 2026)
  • Asia Business Daily — "Aftermath of JoongAng Group's Rehabilitation Proceedings" (Jun 15, 2026)
  • STARNEWS Korea — "JTBC's Default Declaration Marks the Dawn of a Structural Crisis in K-Content" (Jun 17, 2026)
  • BigGo Finance — "JTBC Defaults on USD 13.7 Million Debt, JoongAng Group's Five Affiliates File for Court Receivership" (Jun 2026)
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