ShowBiz & Sports Lifestyle

Hot

South Korea police seek detention warrant for BTS agency founder Bang

South Korea police seek detention warrant for BTS agency founder Bang

By Kyu-seok Shim and Heekyong YangTue, April 21, 2026 at 3:04 AM UTC

0

Bang Si-hyuk, Chairman of HYBE, speaks during a debate hosted by the Kwanhun club, in Seoul, South Korea, March 15, 2023. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji

By Kyu-seok Shim and Heekyong Yang

SEOUL, April 21 (Reuters) - South Korean police have requested a detention warrant for Bang Si-hyuk, ‌the chairman of Kpop agency HYBE, over alleged illegal trading ‌tied to the company's initial public offering.

The Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency said Bang is ​suspected of violating capital market laws by misleading early investors ahead of HYBE's listing and steering them to sell shares to a private equity fund linked to his associates.

Police allege that after HYBE went public ‌the fund sold its ⁠stake and Bang received about 30% of the profits under a prior shareholder agreement, earning roughly 190 billion ⁠won ($129.1 million) in illicit gains.

Bang has previously denied any wrongdoing.

HYBE did not have an immediate comment when contacted by Reuters.

Bang is also the founder ​of HYBE, ​the music powerhouse behind global Kpop ​supergroup BTS.

Advertisement

HYBE shares reversed course ‌after the report and were down 2.9% as of 0215 GMT, compared with a 1.8% rise in South Korea's benchmark KOSPI.

The National Police Agency confirmed that the U.S. embassy in Seoul recently sent a letter asking authorities to allow Bang to travel to the United ‌States, despite a travel ban imposed during ​the investigation.

According to police, the letter sought ​a temporary suspension of ​the ban, citing plans for Bang and other senior ‌executives to attend an event to ​mark U.S. Independence ​Day and hold talks related to the ongoing BTS global tour.

The U.S. embassy in Seoul said it did not have anything ​to add on ‌that matter.

Bang has been barred from leaving South Korea since ​August last year.

($1 = 1471.9 won)

(Reporting by Kyu-seok Shim, Heekyong Yang ​and Jack KimEditing by Ed Davies)

Original Article on Source

Source: “AOL Breaking”

We do not use cookies and do not collect personal data. Just news.