Skip to content
  • KOSPI 2784.26 -23.37 -0.83%
  • KOSDAQ 852.67 -4.84 -0.56%
  • KOSPI200 380.88 -3.90 -1.01%
  • USD/KRW 1391 -1 -0.07%
  • JPY100/KRW 871.23 -4.65 -0.53%
  • EUR/KRW 1487.47 -2.39 -0.16%
  • CNH/KRW 190.78 -0.12 -0.06%
View Market Snapshot
Corporate investment

SK seeks to sell 13.3% stake in Chinese food firm Joyvio

The stake sale is said to be part of the S.Korean investment holding company’s portfolio rebalancing

By May 20, 2024 (Gmt+09:00)

3 Min read

SK and Joyvio Group celebrate a virtual MOU signing ceremony on Jul 26, 2021 (Courtesy of SK)
SK and Joyvio Group celebrate a virtual MOU signing ceremony on Jul 26, 2021 (Courtesy of SK)

SK Inc., the holding company of South Korea’s second-largest business group SK, is in talks with Joyvio Group to sell its entire 13.3% stake in China’s top fresh produce company five years after its investment, said sources on Sunday.

The exit is part of SK Group's investment holding company’s ongoing portfolio restructuring efforts to unload non-core assets, ranging from car rental and small appliance businesses to the alternative food business.   

“SK is mulling exercising its put option contract signed with Joyvio when it purchased a 13.3% stake,” said a source from the investment banking industry on Sunday. “It is in talks with Joyvio shareholders to exercise the put option.”

An official from SK who declined to be named also said, “We are seeking to sell (our) stake in Joyvio but nothing has been confirmed.”

A put option is a contract that gives its holder the right to sell a set number of equity shares at a set price, called the strike price, before a certain expiration date.

Joyvio is a fresh produce company established by Chinese conglomerate Legend Holdings Corp. in 2012. It distributes fruit, seafood and alcoholic beverage products and provides catering services to organizations in China.

It owns foreign food companies overseas such as Australian seafood firm KB Seafood Co. and imports seafood from those countries to sell them in China.

SK acquired a 13.3% stake in Joyvio for 213.7 billion won ($157.7 million) in 2019 with a put option contract and launched a 100 billion won fund in 2021 with the Chinese food company to invest in alternative protein startups in China. It chipped 18 billion won in the fund.

The Joyvio stake sale is deemed part of the SK investment arm’s portfolio rebalancing process to focus on more lucrative, promising businesses, said industry observers. 

(Graphics by Sunny Park)
(Graphics by Sunny Park)

GROUPWIDE PORTFOLIO REBALANCING

In 2023, Joyvio reported a net loss of 33.9 billion won on sales of 3.9 trillion won. SK’s equity stake in Joyvio was valued at 196 billion won, lower than its purchase price, as of end-2023. 

Joyvio is one of the assets SK is seeking to divest as part of its efforts to restructure non-core assets under the direction of Chey Chang-won, the chairman of SK SUPEX Council, SK Group’s top advisory body setting strategic direction and providing guidance on essential business issues.

SK Networks Co. is in negotiations with Affinity Equity Partners, a major Asia-focused private equity firm, to sell its 100% stake in SK Rent-a-Car Co. for 850 billion won.

Earlier this month, it also signed a contract with Kyung Dong Navien Co., a Korean boiler maker, to carve out and sell the gas stove, microwave and oven businesses from its wholly-owned home appliance unit SK Magic to improve the latter’s financial health.

In April, SK Square Co., SK’s other investment arm, sold its entire 2.2% stake in Korea’s gaming behemoth Krafton Inc. for 270 billion won.

Two months earlier, SK Earthon Co., the resource development subsidiary of the country’s top energy firm SK Innovation Co., sold its entire 20% stake in Peru LNG Co. LLC for $256.5 million to secure money for new growth drivers.

(Courtesy of SK)
(Courtesy of SK)

EXIT FROM ALTERNATIVE FOOD BUSINESS

The Joyvio stake sale attempt has spurred speculation that SK may exit entirely from the sustainable food business, said some industry observers.

Since SK turned into an investment holding company in 2017, it has invested in multiple alternative food companies across the world.  

In 2020, it invested 120 billion won in US-based non-animal milk protein producer Perfect Day. It also invested 10 billion won in US-based cell-cultivated salmon producer Wildtype in November 2022.

It also injected 10 billion won in Meatless Farm, a Dutch sustainable food company.  

On Monday morning, SK shares inched up 0.1% at 157,000 won from Friday. The stock has been on a downward spiral since earlier this year.    

Write to Ik-Hwan Kim at lovepen@hankyung.com


Sookyung Seo edited this article.
More to Read
Comment 0
0/300