logo
Global Star Acquisition Inc. and K Enter Holdings Inc. Finalize Business Combination

Global Star Acquisition Inc. and K Enter Holdings Inc. Finalize Business Combination

Yahoo13-05-2025

K Wave Media Ltd. Shares to Begin Trading on Nasdaq on May 14, 2025 Under Ticker 'KWM'
SEOUL and NEW YORK, May 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Global Star Acquisition Inc. (NASDAQ: GLST) ('Global Star'), a special purpose acquisition company and K Enter Holdings Inc. ('K Enter'), a holding company with an internal K drama production team and controlling interest in six diversified entertainment operating companies based in Korea and engaged in the entertainment content and IP creation businesses, today announced the completion of the previously announced business combination that will result in the creation of K Wave Media Ltd. Accordingly, K Wave Media Ltd.'s ordinary shares and warrants are expected to commence trading on The Nasdaq Global Market under the symbols 'KWM' and 'KWMWW', respectively on May 14, 2025.
The business combination was approved at a special meeting of GLST's stockholders on February 3, 2025.
'We are proud to complete this milestone transition of K Wave Media to become the first Korean content media alliance to list on the Nasdaq stock exchange,' said Tan Chin Hwee, Executive Chairman and Interim CEO of K Enter. 'We are laser focused on pursuing our planned growth initiatives across the value chain of our Korean entertainment and media business lines, now with enhanced U.S. visibility to attract a core retail and institutional shareholder base. Additionally, we are appreciative of Global Star's partnership and mutual determination to achieve K Wave's public listing. We are poised to become a leading player in IP-based diversified entertainment delivering high quality K-content to our loyal global fanbase.'
K Wave Media will continue to be led by Tan Chin Hwee, Executive Chairman and Interim CEO of K Enter, until a successor is appointed.
Advisors
D. Boral Capital acted as Global Star's Capital Markets Advisor on the transaction. Loeb & Loeb LLP acted as U.S. legal counsel to K Enter. Duane Morris LLP acted as legal counsel to Global Star.
About K Enter Holdings Inc.
K Enter Holdings Inc. is a Delaware corporation with contracts to acquire controlling equity interests in six diversified entertainment operating companies based in Korea, engaged in the entertainment content, IP creation, merchandising and entertainment investment businesses (the 'Six Korean Entities'). K Enter has an internal K drama production team. The Six Korean Entities to be acquired by K Enter include Play Company Co., Ltd, a Korean IP merchandising company, and Solaire Partners Ltd., a Korean IP content-specialized private equity firm, Studio Anseilen Co., Ltd., a K drama production company, and The LAMP Co., Ltd., Bidangil Pictures Co., Ltd., and Apeitda Co., Ltd., each of which is a K movie production company.
About Global Star Acquisition Inc.
Global Star Acquisition Inc., a Delaware corporation, is a blank check company formed for the purpose of effecting a merger, capital stock exchange, asset acquisition, stock purchase, reorganization or similar business combination with one or more businesses.
Cautionary Statements Regarding Forward-Looking Statements
This press release is provided for informational purposes and for no other purpose. No representations or warranties, express or implied are given in, or in respect of, this press release. To the fullest extent permitted by law under no circumstances will Global Star, K Enter, or any of the Six Korean Entities, interest holders, affiliates, representatives, partners, directors, officers, employees, advisors or agents be responsible or liable for any direct, indirect or consequential loss or loss of profit arising from the use of this press release, its contents, its omissions, reliance on the information contained within it, or on opinions communicated in relation thereto or otherwise arising in connection therewith. Industry and market data used in this press release have been obtained from third-party industry publications and sources as well as from research reports prepared for other purposes. Neither Global Star nor K Enter has independently verified the data obtained from these sources and cannot assure you of the data's accuracy or completeness. This data is subject to change. In addition, this press release does not purport to be all-inclusive or to contain all the information that may be required to make a full analysis of Global Star, K Enter or the Proposed Business Combination. Viewers of this press release should each make their own evaluation of Global Star and K Enter and of the relevance and adequacy of the information and should make such other investigations as they deem necessary. This press release contains certain 'forward-looking statements' within the meaning of the federal securities laws, including statements regarding the benefits of the Proposed Business Combination, including K Enter's ability to accelerate the development of its products and bring them to market, the anticipated timing for completion of the Proposed Business Combination, and Global Star's and K Enter's expectations, plans or forecasts of future events and views as of the date of this press release. Global Star and K Enter anticipate that subsequent events and developments will cause Global Star's and K Enter's assessments to change. These forward-looking statements, which may include, without limitation, words such as 'expect,' 'estimate,' 'project,' 'budget,' 'forecast,' 'anticipate,' 'intend,' 'plan,' 'may,' 'will', 'could,' 'should,' 'believes,' 'predicts,' 'potential,' 'might,' 'continues,' 'think,' 'strategy,' 'future,' and similar expressions, involve significant risks and uncertainties (most of which factors are outside of the control of Global Star or K Enter).
In addition, this press release includes a summary set of risk factors that may have a material impact on Global Star, K Enter or the Proposed Business Combination, which are not intended to capture all the risks to which Global Star, K Enter or the Proposed Business Combination is subject or may be subject. Factors that may cause such differences include but are not limited to: (1) the occurrence of any event, change or other circumstance that could give rise to the termination of the Merger Agreement; (2) the risk that the Proposed Business Combination may not be completed in a timely manner or at all, which may adversely affect the price of the securities; (3) the risk that the Proposed Business Combination may not be completed by Global Star's business combination deadline; (4) the inability to complete the Proposed Business Combination, including but not limited to due to the failure to obtain approval of the stockholders of Global Star or K Enter for the Merger Agreement, to receive certain governmental, regulatory and third party approvals or to satisfy other conditions to closing in the Merger Agreement; (5) the failure to achieve the minimum amount of cash available following any redemptions by Global Star's stockholders; (6) the inability to obtain or maintain the listing of Global Star's common stock on Nasdaq following the Proposed Business Combination, including but not limited to redemptions exceeding anticipated levels or the failure to meet Nasdaq's initial listing standards in connection with the consummation of the Proposed Business Combination; (7) the effect of the announcement or pendency of the Proposed Business Combination on K Enter's business relationships, operating results, and business generally; (8) risks that the Proposed Business Combination disrupts current plans and operations of K Enter or the Six Korean Entities; (9) the inability to realize the anticipated benefits of the Proposed Business Combination and to realize estimated pro forma results and underlying assumptions, including but not limited to with respect to estimated stockholder redemptions and costs related to the Proposed Business Combination; (10) the possibility that Global Star or K Enter or the Six Korean Entities may be adversely affected by other economic or business factors; (11) changes in the markets in which K Enter and the Six Korean Entities compete, including but not limited to with respect to its competitive landscape, technology evolution, changes in entertainment choices or regulatory changes; (12) changes in domestic and global general economic conditions; (13) risk that K Enter may not be able to execute its growth strategies; (14) the risk that K Enter experiences difficulties in managing its growth and expanding operations after the Proposed Business Combination; (15) the risk that the parties will need to raise additional capital to execute the business plan, which may not be available on acceptable terms or at all; (16) the ability to recognize the anticipated benefits of the Proposed Business Combination to achieve its commercialization and development plans, and identify and realize additional opportunities, which may be affected by, among other things, competition, the ability of K Enter to grow and manage growth economically and hire and retain key employees; (17) risk that K Enter may not be able to develop and maintain effective internal controls; (18) the risk that K Enter may fail to keep pace with rapid technological developments or changes in entertainment tastes to provide new and innovative products and services, or may make substantial investments in unsuccessful new products and services; (19) the ability to develop, license or acquire new content, products and services; (20) the risk that K Enter is unable to secure or protect its intellectual property; (21) the risk of product liability or regulatory lawsuits or proceedings relating to K Enter's business; (22) the risk of cyber security or foreign exchange losses; (23) changes in applicable laws or regulations; (24) the outcome of any legal proceedings that may be instituted against the parties related to the Merger Agreement or the Proposed Business Combination; (25) the impact of the global COVID-19 pandemic and response on any of the foregoing risks, including but not limited to supply chain disruptions; (26) the risk that K Enter fails to successfully and timely consummate its acquisition of one or more of the Six Korean Entities'; and (27) other risks and uncertainties identified in the registration statement on Form F-4, which included a proxy statement/prospectus filed in connection with the Proposed Business Combination (the 'Registration Statement'), including those under 'Risk Factors' therein, and in other filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ('SEC') made by Global Star. You should carefully consider the foregoing factors and the other risks and uncertainties described in the 'Risk Factors' section of Global Star's Annual Report on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and the Registration Statement filed with the SEC with respect to the Proposed Business Combination, and other documents filed by Global Star from time to time with the SEC. These filings identify and address other important risks and uncertainties that could cause actual events and results to differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements. The foregoing list of factors is not exhaustive, are provided for illustrative purposes only, and are not intended to serve as, and must not be relied on as, a guarantee, an assurance, a prediction or a definitive statement of fact or probability. Actual events and circumstances are difficult or impossible to predict and will differ from assumptions. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made. If any of these risks materialize or our assumptions prove incorrect, actual results could differ materially from the results implied by these forward-looking statements. There may be additional risks that neither Global Star nor K Enter presently know or that Global Star and K Enter currently believe are immaterial that could also cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements. Global Star and K Enter anticipate that subsequent events and developments will cause Global Star's and K Enter's assessments to change. However, while Global Star and K Enter may elect to update these forward-looking statements at some point in the future, Global Star and K Enter specifically disclaim any obligation to do so. Neither Global Star nor K Enter gives any assurance that Global Star or K Enter, or the combined company, will achieve its expectations. Accordingly, undue reliance should not be placed upon the forward-looking statements, and they should not be relied upon as representing Global Star's and K Enter's assessments as of any date subsequent to the date of this press release.
Contact
K Enter Holdings, Inc.Ted KimDirector and Co-Founder, K-Enter Holdingsted@globalfundpe.com
Investor ContactMZ GroupShannon Devine/Rory Rumore+1 (203) 741-8811GLST@mzgroup.usSign in to access your portfolio

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Llywela Harris, music teacher who exerted a lasting influence over generations of girls
Llywela Harris, music teacher who exerted a lasting influence over generations of girls

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Llywela Harris, music teacher who exerted a lasting influence over generations of girls

Llywela Harris, who has died aged 94, was a pint-sized music teacher who inspired generations of public schoolgirls to express themselves through song. The diminutive Llywela Harris possessed a Welsh scepticism of rank: to her, it did not matter where her young wards came from or how rich their Midlands industrialist parents might be. It was a question of where they might go harmonically. Her choir at Abbots Bromley school in Staffordshire dominated girls' music in the 1970s and 1980s, and later she was the warden of the Royal School of Church Music in London and administrator of the St Davids Cathedral Festival, Pembrokeshire. It was at St Davids that she spent her last 25 years, presiding over the tiny city's cultural life like a retired empress. Organists, conductors and visiting soloists were summoned to her cottage in Goat Street to have the rule run over them. Llywela Harris encouraged, cajoled and made things happen. Sir John Rutter composed for her and she marched her girls behind the Iron Curtain for a singing tour of Hungary. Had she been born a generation later she would likely have become a cathedral director of music. Instead, it was at the school of St Mary and St Anne, Abbots Bromley, that her creative energies found an outlet and where she exerted a lasting influence over generations of girls. She also became a mentor to Adrian Partington, now director of music at Gloucester Cathedral, and to Geraint Bowen, director of music at Hereford Cathedral, who received encouragement from Llywela Harris during his youthful posting at St Davids. Abbots Bromley, founded in 1874 by the Rev Nathaniel Woodard, was one of the Woodard group of schools, intended to provide a Christian education for the middle classes. They were sometimes described as 'chapels with a few buildings attached', but in this instance the chapel came with a terrier-like choir mistress with an ear for a duff note and an unerring nose for slackers. The school's motto, 'That our daughters may be as the polished corners of the temple' (Psalm 144), was never better exemplified than by Llywela Harris, who had herself been educated there. Abbots Bromley was her life, even after retirement. She was its Miss Chips. Llywela Vernon Harris was born on April 11 1931 at Lampeter in Cardiganshire, the second daughter of the Rev William Henry Harris, precentor of St Davids Cathedral and Professor of Theology and Welsh at St David's College, Lampeter. He translated several hymns and the office of compline into Welsh. Llywela's mother, sometime mayor of Lampeter, was a fine organist. Llywela and her sister Elizabeth spent their childhood walking the cliffs and bathing at Caerfai and Whitesands. She was sent to board at Abbots Bromley in 1940 and quickly distinguished herself as a pianist. In 1948 she began her studies at the Royal Academy of Music in London, under Douglas Hawkridge on the organ and Eric Thiman for composition. After gaining her LRAM she took a brief post at Southmoor prep school in Berkshire before she returned to Abbots Bromley as Director of Chapel Music in 1953. Apart from a stint at the Guildford girls' grammar school (1958-60) and a sabbatical at Stanford (1967), there she stayed. Under Llywela Harris's direction a typical week's chapel stretched to more than 10 hours of morning assemblies, compline, evensong, choral society, choir rehearsals, organ recitals, Holy Communion and the occasional dawn mass. Requests for a less onerous routine were met with masterly incomprehension. On Saturdays she took the entire school through the next week's choral music. She would sweep in to the assembly, all of 5ft 2in, and the silence was instant. Immaculately coiffeured and made-up, dressed in knee-length skirts, kitten heels and winged spectacles, she would play the opening chords of a hymn before patrolling the aisles, exhorting the girls – many towering over her – to sing. 'You are not singing to yourselves, ladies, and you are not singing to your mothers. You are singing to God, and He is a long way up.' Hundreds of youngsters bent to the will of a single, small Welsh woman. Each pupil was armed with an English Hymnal and the Briggs and Frere Manual of Plainsong. When 100 Hymns for Today was added to the arsenal, Harris proved surprisingly open to new hymns such as God of concrete, God of steel. A singable tune was the benchmark. Some days the noise levels were worthy of Cardiff Arms Park. Choir practices were more rigorous. Sins included inappropriate breath-taking, slouching, fidgeting and casual enunciation – 'Lord of hoSTS'. On Speech Day the girls would process, veiled like nuns, to St Nicholas village church, walking in pairs arranged in height order and singing all 26 verses of Jerusalem, My Happy Home – a tradition known to all as 'Jerry Heights'. There they would launch into Harris's upper-part reduction of CV Stanford's Te Deum in B flat, which had been rehearsed for weeks ('Judge has SIX beats, ladies!'). EW Naylor's setting of the Benedicite was a fixture of Lent term. Such canticles had faded from most Anglican worship, yet at Abbots Bromley they endured. Llywela Harris's teaching room, named Mozart, overlooked a dappled lawn where girls gathered for iced buns at break time. Many of her pupils became musicians for life. Her choir often sang at Lichfield Cathedral. They performed for Songs of Praise and for Radio 3's Let the People Sing, and released two albums. Llywela Harris marked her retirement from teaching in 1990 by riding away in a hot air balloon, serenaded by the girls singing the soul song Up, Up and Away. Then, after a four-year stint at the RSCM at Addington Palace in Croydon, where she tightened the ropes as its warden, she returned to Goat Street and ran the annual St Davids Cathedral Festival. In old age she spent afternoons listening to Radio 3's Choral Evensong, surrounded by her grandfather's watercolours of Oxford; beside her bed was a framed list of the school's choral society collaborations with Repton. Despite more than one engagement, Llywela Harris never married. Llywela Harris, born April 11 1931, died May 13 2025 Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

The $1.3 Billion Health-Tech IPO Everyone Missed--Until It Soared 21% on Day One
The $1.3 Billion Health-Tech IPO Everyone Missed--Until It Soared 21% on Day One

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The $1.3 Billion Health-Tech IPO Everyone Missed--Until It Soared 21% on Day One

Omada Health (NASDAQ:OMDA) opened its first day of trading with a bangjumping 21% to $23 after pricing its IPO at $19. That move gives the digital chronic-care startup a market cap of roughly $1.3 billion. The $150 million raise was more than just well receivedinvestor demand came in more than 15x oversubscribed, with most allocations going to a concentrated group of institutional buyers. It's another sign that appetite for health-tech IPOs is heating up again. U.S. listings have raised nearly $25 billion year-to-date, and early-stage healthcare names are up an average of 18% since listing. Founded in 2011, Omada offers virtual care between doctor visitsfocused on diabetes, obesity, hypertension, and joint pain. What sets it apart? It's not chasing the GLP-1 gold rush. Instead, Omada supports people already on those drugs, helping them manage side effects, nutrition, and post-treatment maintenance. About 50,000 of its 679,000 members are on GLP-1s. CEO Sean Duffy told Bloomberg that while AI powers much of the back-end, real human interaction is what drives results. Our members tell us they want a personand I have yet to see anyone that feels accountable to ChatGPT, he said. Revenue for Q1 2025 came in just under $55 millionup from $35.1 million a year agowhile net losses narrowed by more than half to $9.4 million. That improving financial picture, combined with a clear niche in chronic care, could be what's drawing top-tier investors. Revelation Partners, Andreessen Horowitz, Fidelity, and USVP are all among the largest shareholders. The IPO was led by Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan. OMDA now trades on the Nasdaq Global Marketand it's one more sign that digital health might be staging a real comeback. This article first appeared on GuruFocus.

Omada Health Soars 42% in Nasdaq Debut After $150 Million IPO
Omada Health Soars 42% in Nasdaq Debut After $150 Million IPO

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Omada Health Soars 42% in Nasdaq Debut After $150 Million IPO

Omada Health (OMDA, Financials) surged 42% in its Nasdaq debut Friday after the virtual chronic care company priced its initial public offering at $19 per share, raising $150 million and securing a valuation just above $1 billion. The stock opened at $23 and climbed quickly past $27. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 8 Warning Sign with X. Founded in 2012, Omada offers virtual programs for chronic conditions including prediabetes, diabetes, and hypertension. The IPO, which sold 7.9 million shares, is part of a recent resurgence in health and tech listings, following last month's debut of Hinge Health and Thursday's surge in Circle Internet shares. In its prospectus, Omada reported Q1 revenue jumped 57% year over year to $55 million, while full-year 2024 revenue rose 38% to $169.8 million. The company narrowed its net loss in the most recent quarter to $9.4 million from $19 million a year earlier. Major outside shareholders include U.S. Venture Partners, Andreessen Horowitz, and Fidelity's FMR LLC, each holding a 9% to 10% stake. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store