SEOUL — South Korean police are considering a third attempt to secure an arrest warrant for HYBE Chairman Bang Si-hyuk after prosecutors rejected their latest request, marking the second time in two weeks investigators failed to persuade the Seoul Southern District Prosecutors’ Office to detain the K-pop mogul.
Bang Si-hyuk
The high-stakes financial investigation into alleged unfair trading and investor deception ahead of HYBE’s 2022 IPO has dragged on for months, casting a shadow over the entertainment giant behind global superstars BTS and NewJeans. Bang, 53, remains free while authorities debate next steps in one of the most closely watched corporate probes in South Korea’s music industry.
Prosecutors on May 7 formally returned the police’s refiled warrant application, citing incomplete supplementary investigation as requested after the first rejection in late April. The decision underscores ongoing tensions between police investigators and prosecutors over the strength of evidence in the complex case.
Details of the allegations
Bang stands accused of violating the Capital Markets Act by misleading early investors about HYBE’s IPO plans, allegedly inducing them to sell shares at undervalued prices before the company’s public listing generated massive gains. Police claim the actions allowed Bang and associates to secure unfair profits estimated in the hundreds of billions of won (roughly $180-260 million).
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The probe intensified after complaints from minority shareholders and former investors who alleged they were not properly informed of upcoming corporate developments that significantly boosted share values post-IPO. HYBE went public in 2022 at a valuation that propelled Bang’s personal fortune into the billions.
Bang’s legal team has consistently denied wrongdoing, emphasizing full cooperation with investigators. They argue the case lacks sufficient grounds for detention, describing the police actions as overly aggressive. Bang has voluntarily appeared for questioning multiple times, including extended sessions last year.
Timeline of warrant attempts
Police first sought an arrest warrant on April 21. Prosecutors rejected it on April 24, ordering further investigation into key details such as specific communications, financial records and the necessity of detention given Bang’s cooperation.
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Investigators refiled on April 30, asserting they had addressed the gaps. Yet on May 7, the Seoul Southern District Prosecutors’ Office’s financial and securities crime division again denied the request. Officials stated that requested supplementary probes had not been adequately conducted.
A Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency spokesperson confirmed they are now “reviewing” whether to reapply a third time after bolstering their case. No timeline has been set, and sources indicate internal deliberations could take days or weeks.
Impact on HYBE and K-pop industry
The prolonged uncertainty has weighed on HYBE’s operations and share price. The company, valued at tens of billions of dollars, continues day-to-day business under Bang’s leadership while facing separate scrutiny over artist management practices and internal power struggles.
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Industry analysts warn that a prolonged investigation could distract from creative output and international expansion. HYBE’s global influence, built on BTS’s unprecedented success, makes the case a bellwether for corporate governance standards in South Korea’s entertainment sector.
Broader context of entertainment probes
The Bang case fits a pattern of heightened regulatory scrutiny on South Korea’s entertainment conglomerates. Similar investigations have targeted other agency leaders over stock manipulations, artist contracts and workplace issues. Prosecutors’ cautious approach reflects lessons from past high-profile cases where premature arrests led to public backlash or overturned convictions.
Legal experts note that arrest warrants in white-collar cases require clear demonstration of flight risk, evidence tampering potential or societal impact. Bang’s high profile, substantial assets and history of compliance make detention a high bar to clear.
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What happens next
Police have several options: conduct deeper supplementary probes as directed, seek alternative measures like travel restrictions or summons, or ultimately forward the case for indictment without arrest. Prosecutors could also request additional materials before any third warrant attempt.
Bang continues to lead HYBE amid the legal cloud. The company has issued statements expressing confidence in his leadership and cooperation with authorities. No charges have been formally filed yet, meaning the investigation remains in its pre-indictment phase.
Reactions from fans and stakeholders
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BTS fans (ARMY) and broader K-pop communities have followed developments closely, with many expressing support for Bang while calling for a fair process. Online forums buzz with speculation about potential outcomes and their effects on favorite artists.
Corporate governance advocates view the case as a test of accountability for entertainment chaebol-style leaders who wield enormous influence. Others worry excessive scrutiny could hamper innovation in a globally competitive industry.
As deliberations continue, the saga highlights the complex intersection of celebrity, corporate power and justice in South Korea. Police must now decide whether a strengthened third warrant application can overcome prosecutorial skepticism or if the case will proceed through slower channels.
For now, Bang Si-hyuk remains at liberty, steering HYBE through turbulent waters while the legal spotlight persists. The coming weeks could prove decisive in determining whether one of K-pop’s most powerful figures faces detention or continues operating under investigation.
Electrification is often discussed in terms of visible assets: electric vehicles, charging stations, and energy tariffs. For most organisations, these are the elements that shape investment decisions and public sustainability commitments.
However, as deployment scales, performance is increasingly determined by a less visible layer of infrastructure. This layer rarely features in board-level discussions, yet it directly influences operational reliability, cost predictability, and system resilience.
The emerging risk for businesses is not adoption of new technology, but underestimating the infrastructure required to make that technology consistently work at scale.
The shift from assets to systems
Traditional infrastructure thinking is asset-centric. A charger is installed, a vehicle is deployed, and performance is assumed to follow specification.
In practice, electrified systems behave differently. They operate as interconnected chains of components, where reliability is determined by the weakest link rather than the most advanced element.
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This shift from isolated assets to dependent systems introduces a structural challenge: small inconsistencies in supporting components can accumulate into measurable operational inefficiencies.
Where operational risk actually emerges
In early-stage deployments, infrastructure issues are often attributed to high-level components such as charging units or software platforms. These are visible, complex, and therefore assumed to be the primary source of variation.
However, in scaled environments, a different pattern emerges. Performance variability is frequently driven by lower-profile physical components within the system architecture.
These components are not typically monitored with the same intensity as primary assets, yet they operate under continuous load conditions that expose differences in quality, durability, and consistency.
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The result is not immediate failure, but gradual degradation in operational predictability.
Why small inefficiencies become structural at scale
At individual unit level, minor variations are often negligible. At fleet or multi-site level, they compound into system-wide inefficiencies.
Examples include:
reduced predictability in asset availability
increased buffering requirements in operational planning
higher sensitivity to peak demand periods
gradual erosion of utilisation efficiency across infrastructure networks
The key issue is not breakdown, but inconsistency. Systems designed around assumed uniform performance begin to drift when that assumption does not hold in practice.
The procurement blind spot
Most procurement frameworks remain optimised for upfront cost, specification compliance, and installation speed. These criteria are necessary but incomplete in electrified environments.
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What is often underweighted is lifecycle behaviour under sustained operational load.
This includes:
how components perform under continuous use
how degradation profiles differ across suppliers
how maintenance frequency evolves over time
how small variations scale into system-level inefficiencies
As a result, infrastructure decisions that appear rational at purchase stage can generate disproportionate operational costs over time.
The rise of quality differentiation in commodity infrastructure
As electrification matures, previously interchangeable components are becoming differentiated based on performance stability rather than basic compliance.
Manufacturing consistency, certification rigor, and material durability are increasingly relevant indicators of long-term system reliability.
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In this context, the importance of component-level engineering becomes more visible. For example, manufacturers such as Voldt® operate in a segment where emphasis is placed on reducing variability under sustained commercial load conditions, rather than simply meeting baseline specification requirements.
This reflects a broader market shift toward infrastructure-grade quality standards across the electrification ecosystem.
From electrification projects to infrastructure management
The strategic implication for businesses is a reframing of electrification itself.
What is often treated as a deployment project is, in reality, a transition into ongoing infrastructure management. This requires a different evaluation lens:
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from individual asset performance to system behaviour
from installation success to operational stability
from purchase cost to lifecycle impact
from compliance to resilience
Under this model, infrastructure is not a static investment but a continuously operating system with compounding dependencies.
Reliability of the infrastructure
As electrification scales across UK businesses, the primary constraint is shifting. It is no longer access to technology, but the reliability of the infrastructure that supports it.
The most significant risks are not necessarily located in high-visibility assets, but in the less visible components that determine whether systems perform consistently under real-world conditions.
For organisations moving from pilot projects to full-scale deployment, understanding and managing this “invisible infrastructure” layer is becoming a defining factor in operational success.
The empty block could be brought back into use(Image: Google)
An abandoned office building in Timperley could be brought back into use as new homes.
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Developer Blueoak Estates Ltd is eyeing up the three-storey property in Etchells Road with a view to turning it into apartments. The building was last home to the Lookers Motor Group.
Some 34 new homes are proposed to be created within the office block. These would be a mix of one- and two-beds, planning documents show.
This could be just phase one of the plans for the site, however. Documents state that the plant room and an external ‘plant well’ in the roof area would be redundant under the new use and could be ‘subject to future conversion’.
Limited changes would be made to the exterior of the building. These would see new windows fitted and the ‘part removal’ of the external stairs.
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Some 38 parking spaces are proposed for the new homes. An additional 34 cycle spaces would be provided in an internal storage area.
Blueoaks is seeking permission from Trafford council for the change of use of the building.
To find all the planning applications, traffic diversions, road layout changes, alcohol licence applications and more in your community, visit the Public Notices Portal.
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Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, who has not been seen or heard publicly since the war began, “issued new and decisive directives for the continuation of operations and the powerful confrontation with the enemies” while meeting with the head of the joint military command, the state broadcaster reported, with no details.
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Shares of Urban Company plunged as much as 9% to their day’s low of Rs 127 on the BSE on Monday after it reported a sharp rise in consolidated net loss for the March quarter to Rs 161 crore, compared with Rs 2.8 crore in the same period last year, even as the company posted strong revenue growth.
Revenue from operations for Q4FY26 rose 43% year-on-year to Rs 426 crore from Rs 298 crore a year ago. On a sequential basis, revenue grew 11% from Rs 383 crore reported in the October-December quarter of FY26. The company’s losses also widened sharply quarter-on-quarter, increasing nearly eightfold from Rs 21 crore in Q3FY26.
The professional services platform reported a 42% year-on-year rise in net transacting value (NTV) to Rs 1,148 crore during the quarter, the highest level in the last 15 quarters.
Adjusted EBITDA loss for Q4FY26 stood at Rs 98 crore, while adjusted EBITDA excluding InstaHelp came in at Rs 22 crore. The company also reported a 160-basis-point improvement in margins.
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For the full financial year, NTV increased 31% year-on-year to Rs 4,290 crore, while revenue from operations rose 36% to Rs 1,556 crore. According to the company’s filing, both NTV and revenue growth accelerated for the second consecutive year.
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Among key business segments, India Consumer Services excluding InstaHelp posted 26% year-on-year NTV growth in Q4FY26, marking the strongest growth in 11 quarters. International operations across the UAE and Singapore recorded 84% year-on-year growth in NTV during the quarter. The company said both India Consumer Services, excluding InstaHelp and the international business remained profitable in Q4FY26 while also improving margins on a yearly basis.Native NTV rose 67% year-on-year in the March quarter, while revenue from the segment increased 75%.
InstaHelp delivered 2.7 million orders and recorded Rs 40 crore in NTV in Q4FY26, compared with 1.6 million orders and Rs 28 crore in NTV in Q3FY26. March alone saw over 1.1 million orders.
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