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K-pop giant Hybe shares take another hit as dispute with NewJeans label drags on

K-pop giant Hybe shares take another hit as dispute with NewJeans label drags on
Min Hee-jin, CEO of HYBE's sub-label Ador, speaks at a press conference in Seoul, South Korea, on April 25, 2024.
PHOTO: Reuters

SEOUL - A South Korean music executive credited with creating popular K-pop group NewJeans denied allegations that she was trying to break her label away from Hybe, home to global sensation BTS, sending the K-pop giant's shares tumbling on Friday (April 26).

The internal dispute at Hybe, South Korea's biggest music firm, has wiped over 12 per cent off its share price since it became public on Monday and put a damper on expectations for an upturn from new releases by NewJeans, as well as the return of some BTS members from mandatory military service.

Hybe shares closed 4.95 per cent down on Friday, while the benchmark Kospi index ended more than one per cent higher.

On Thursday, Min Hee-jin, CEO of the Ador label majority owned by Hybe, told a live-streamed event watched by millions of K-pop fans that she was not plotting to break away from the company, denying Hybe claims that she was leading plans to go independent.

Hybe launched an internal probe earlier this week, and has accused Min of breach of trust.

"I'm sorry for causing worry to the fans, artists, and the staff over what happened during the process of upgrading the multi-label (system)," Hybe CEO Park Ji-won said in a statement.

Min and other top executives own a 20 per cent stake in Ador while Hybe owns an 80 per cent stake.

The dispute is the latest to hit South Korea's lucrative K-pop industry.

Last year, the takeover of SM Entertainment by South Korean social media giant Kakao, triggered an internal battle over management, and Fifty Fifty, a girl group behind TikTok hit Cupid, also saw their career fizzle out following a legal battle with its agency Attrakt in 2023.

ALSO READ: Record giant Hybe audits NewJeans label as infighting returns to K-pop

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