SEOUL, May 28 (Reuters) - China's Tencent Music
is expected to become the second-largest
shareholder of major K-pop agency SM Entertainment,
according to a South Korean filing on Tuesday.
South Korea's Hybe said in a regulatory filing
that it plans to sell its 2.2 million shares in SM Entertainment
to Tencent Music Entertainment ( TME ) for 243 billion won ($177
million) on May 30.
The 9.7% stake would make Tencent Music the second-largest
shareholder in SM Entertainment, after the 42% controlling stake
held by Kakao Corp and affiliate Kakao
Entertainment, according to an SM filing.
Tencent Music did not immediately reply to a request for
comment. Its shares climbed 2.9% on Wednesday in Hong Kong after
the announcement of the deal.
There have been signs of a potential thaw in the unofficial
ban on K-pop concerts and performances in China, in place since
2016 after Beijing protested against the deployment of a U.S.
anti-missile defence system in South Korea.
Restarting K-pop concerts in China would sharply increase
major agencies' ticket revenue, analysts said.
Hybe, a leading K-pop agency behind supergroup BTS, acquired
the SM Entertainment stake in a failed takeover attempt in 2023.
Hybe said in its filing that it was selling the stake for
"efficient management of investment assets".