Kumho-Asiana Chairman to Quit over Audit Uproar | Be Korea-savvy

Kumho-Asiana Chairman to Quit over Audit Uproar


Park Sam-koo, chairman of Kumho Asiana Group, announced on March 28, 2019, in Seoul that he will step down from his position as group chairman and the CEO of two affiliates, Asiana Airlines and Kumho Industrial, to take responsibility for the recent audit fiasco. (Yonhap)

Park Sam-koo, chairman of Kumho Asiana Group, announced on March 28, 2019, in Seoul that he will step down from his position as group chairman and the CEO of two affiliates, Asiana Airlines and Kumho Industrial, to take responsibility for the recent audit fiasco. (Yonhap)

SEOUL, Mar. 28 (Korea Bizwire)Kumho-Asiana Group said Thursday its chairman will resign from key managerial posts, holding himself responsible for the recent controversy over an audit report for Asiana Airlines Inc.

Park Sam-koo will step down as group chairman and CEO of flagship Asiana Airlines and Kumho Industrial Co., the group’s holding company. He will also stand down as a director of Kumho Buslines.

“Park made the decision to take responsibility for the audit uproar that sparked chaos in the market,” the group said in a statement. “The largest shareholder will make every effort to normalize Asiana Airlines at any cost.”

Kumho-Asiana said it will tap an outside manager as group chairman as early as possible to put the ailing airline back on track. Group Vice Chairman Lee Won-tae will chair an emergency committee and take charge of group affairs, for the time being, to prevent a managerial vacuum, it added.

Shares of Asiana Airlines, the smaller of South Korea’s two full-service carriers, surged 2.92 percent to close at 3,520 won (US$3.1) on the Seoul bourse.

Park’s decision came after Asiana Airlines’ auditor, Samil PricewaterhouseCoopers, on Tuesday upgraded its opinion on the airline’s 2018 annual report to “unqualified” from a “qualified opinion” issued four days ago.

Kumho Industrial also received a qualified opinion. Trading of shares in the two companies were suspended from Friday to Tuesday.

An independent auditor issues a qualified opinion when it finds something wrong with the financial statements of a company or the company refuses to submit requested documents.

The qualified opinion spooked investors. Shares in Asiana Airlines plunged 15 percent on Tuesday, despite the upgraded auditor’s opinion.

Analysts warned that a lack of reliability in Asiana’s financial reports may restrict its access to capital markets and lead to a liquidity crunch.

Kumho-Asiana also said Park met with Korea Development Bank (KDB) Chairman and CEO Lee Dong-geol on Wednesday to request KDB’s cooperation in restoring investor confidence in Asiana Airlines.

Testifying before a parliamentary committee earlier on Thursday, Lee said the state lender will renew its memorandum of understanding (MOU) on the improvement of Asiana Airlines’ financial health in early April.

“Luckily, the auditor’s opinion on Asiana Airlines was recovered to qualified, but the controversy dented market confidence,” Lee said. “We will hold close consultation with the airline to sign a new deal that calls for thorough implementation of self-rescue measures and may help regain investor confidence.”

On April 6, 2018, the KDB, Asiana Airlines’ main creditor bank, signed the MOU requiring the carrier to secure liquidity through sales of noncore assets and issuance of convertible and perpetual bonds.

Asiana owes 3.2 trillion won ($2.8 billion) to financial institutions and it has to repay 1 trillion won of the total this year, according to the company.

Asiana Airlines swung to a net loss of 10.4 billion won last year from the previous year’s 248 billion won net profit due to currency-related losses and increased jet fuel costs.

The carrier’s debt ratio came to 504.9 percent as of end-2018, down 83 percentage points from a year ago, helped by 1.09 trillion won in debt repayment and proceeds from asset sales.

Market watchers, meanwhile, said Park’s resignation is seen as a hard decision by Asiana Airlines to muddle through its current liquidity problem, industry sources said.

The group has Asian Airlines, Air Busan Co. and several other affiliates under its wing, with Asiana accounting for roughly 60 percent of the group’s revenues.

In fact, the airline has been dogged by liquidity problems in the face of sizeable debts.

Worsening the situation, Asiana Airlines’ credit ratings took a hit following the accounting fiasco.

Reflecting this, the company recently scrapped its plan to sell 65 billion won worth of debts.

(Yonhap)

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