KPOP ETF Shuts Down as Music Sales Slow
An exchange-traded fund that aimed to track the fortunes of the South Korean K-Pop industry and its artists, including BTS and Blackpink, is closing after failing to generate the enthusiasm that's typically associated with the globally popular music.
The Jakota KPOP & Korean Entertainment ETF (KPOP), which launched in August 2022, has lost over 40% of its value since hitting its all-time high in February 2023. It currently holds $1.4 million in assets and, since its launch, has net inflows of $2.3 million. Trading in KPOP ends April 1, according to an SEC filing dated March 13.
Aimed at a niche and potentially fleeting consumer taste—not to mention one that many American investors don't know much about—KPOP was launched into the corner of the ETF industry that gambles on trends at risk of flaming out or not catching on. In that regard, it's similar to the so-called thematic funds that tracked meme stocks and the metaverse, many of which closed over the past few years.
While the Korean entertainment industry that Exchange Traded Concepts sought to tap with KPOP has generated billions of dollars in music and other media sales over the past decade or so, sales are slowing. Album sales fell 19% last year, the first year of declines after nine straight years of growth, according to Music Business Worldwide, citing South Korea's Circle Chart.
U.S. consumers bought $291.8 million of K-Pop records, the outlet said, citing the Korea Customs Service.
Source: etf.com
KPOP's biggest holding was a nearly 12% allocation to SM Entertainment Co., whose roster includes KANGTA and Red Velvet. Its stock gained 21% over the past year in South Korea.
Another ETF aimed at the music industry, the Clouty Tune ETF (TUNE) closed in November 2023, 10 months after it was issued.
KPOP's issuer, Exchange Traded Concepts, holds $4.4 billion in 38 ETFs, including the $22.4 million MUSQ Global Music Industry Index ETF (MUSQ). That fund's price is little-changed over the past three months.Permalink | © Copyright 2025 etf.com. All rights reserved
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
10 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Kendal Calling issue tribute to 'genius' Brian Wilson
Kendal Calling has issued a tribute following the death of The Beach Boys' Brian Wilson. Wilson was the eldest and last surviving of the three musical brothers who formed the American rock band in 1961, alongside their cousin Mike Love and school friend Al Jardine. The Beach Boys performed at the Cumbrian festival in 2017 alongside Stereophonics, Manic Street Preachers and Franz Ferdinand. A spokesperson for Kendal Calling said on Instagram: 'We are very sad to hear the news of Brian Wilson's passing. 'Genius is a term often overused but not in this instance. Undoubtedly one of the greatest songwriters of all time and a master of his craft. 'We had the pleasure of hosting Brian in the Deer Park back in 2017 - it was one of those real 'pinch me' moments getting to see his name on a Kendal Calling poster.'
Yahoo
13 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The World's Largest Meatpacker Is Finally Set for Its NYSE Debut
The world's biggest meat company is set to debut on the New York Stock Exchange, riding strong earnings and American consumers' fixation on protein. Ordinarily, such a deal would draw a crowd of banks, a big roadshow and a traditional listing-day bell-ringing ceremony. JBS is going a different route, simply making its shares available to trade and letting the market take it from there. The Case for Rate Cuts Is Growing Inside ABC News's Decision to Oust a Longtime Correspondent Boeing Crash in India Is First Fatal Incident Involving a 787 Jet Chime Financial Is the Latest IPO to Soar in Debut Aerospace Startup JetZero to Start Building Futuristic Planes in North Carolina The São Paulo-based company on Friday will directly list its shares on the Big Board, aiming to cement its image as an American meat conglomerate. JBS last week delisted its shares from Brazil's São Paulo Stock Exchange, where they had traded for almost two decades. 'This step will mark a new chapter in the company's journey,' JBS Chief Executive Gilberto Tomazoni said last month. The $15 billion Brazilian meatpacking conglomerate brings to U.S. markets a sprawling global operation—and some baggage. A corruption case in Brazil ensnared two of its founding family members, who did jail time related to the affair, and environmental groups have long alleged it has driven deforestation. How JBS's listing trades will be a barometer on whether U.S. investors harbor concerns about the company, or are eager to get a piece of its prospects. JBS leaders have been trying to list shares in the U.S. since at least 2016. Company officials have said the move would help reduce its cost of capital and expand its branded product offering. JBS Chief Financial Officer Guilherme Cavalcanti said that the company isn't raising capital from the listing and that moving its shares from Brazil to the U.S. will open the company to a broader pool of potential investors. He said the company doesn't need a roadshow and regularly talks to investors at conferences. 'We are just doing bureaucratic things in changing an exchange,' Cavalcanti said in an interview. 'Why should I pay something to the bank, right, if I don't need them?' Named for founder José Batista Sobrinho, JBS began as a family-owned slaughterhouse in the Brazilian countryside. The Bastista family built JBS into a beef powerhouse in its home country, and harnessed government-backed loans to help fund an international acquisition spree that made it a global giant. JBS employs roughly 280,000 people around the world, processing protein ranging from beef to salmon and lamb. More than half of JBS's nearly $80 billion in sales now come from North America, where it is the largest U.S. processor of beef, the second-largest pork supplier and the majority owner of Pilgrim's Pride, the second-largest American chicken company. JBS reported a nearly $2 billion profit for 2024 compared with a loss the prior year, and its annual sales surpassed Wall Street analysts' estimates. The company's past efforts to list its shares in the U.S. were interrupted by market conditions following the Covid-19 pandemic, executives have said. JBS has also dealt with fallout from a corporate corruption scandal in Brazil. J&F Investimentos, which is run by the Batista family and owns about half of JBS's stock, admitted in 2017 to paying about $150 million in bribes to Brazilian politicians to help secure cheap government funding for acquisitions. Fallout from that episode landed the billionaire brothers Joesley and Wesley Batista in jail for several months. J&F in 2020 settled a corruption case with U.S. authorities, which it said was important to improving corporate governance efforts. Some of the largest American banks, including Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs, won't do business with JBS for compliance reasons, according to people familiar with the matter. A JBS spokeswoman said the company has a robust compliance program and uses a number of American, Canadian, European and Latin American banks. She said that as JBS board members, Wesley and Joesley Batista bring decades of operational experience, including turning around many of its U.S. acquisitions over the years. U.S. lawmakers and environmental groups have raised concerns over JBS's stock listing plan. Last year a bipartisan group of senators, including now Secretary of State Marco Rubio, called on the Securities and Exchange Commission to scrutinize the listing, saying it could 'subject U.S. investors to risk from a company with a history of blatant, systemic corruption, and further entrench its monopoly power.' Environmental groups have urged the SEC and NYSE to bar the listing, citing what they called JBS's record of profiting from Amazon deforestation, which the company has denied. Last month, shareholder advisory firms Glass Lewis and Institutional Shareholder Services recommended JBS investors vote against the company's listing plans. The firms said the listing could give J&F Investimentos, the company's controlling shareholder, roughly 85% of voting power in the U.S.-listed company. JBS secured approval from the SEC earlier this year. Company shareholders in late May approved a plan to restructure the company in the Netherlands and move forward with a U.S. listing. In addition to its primary New York listing, JBS will trade in Brazil through Brazilian Depositary Receipts, or BDRs. In a letter to the SEC, Michael Martino, founder of Mason Capital Management, a JBS shareholder, said that being publicly traded in the U.S. would enhance the company's governance. 'We see a company built over many years from nothing to $80 billion in sales,' Martino said. Write to Patrick Thomas at and Corrie Driebusch at Scale AI Gets Meta Investment That Values It at More Than $29 Billion Why Warner Boss Zaslav Is Having to Split Up the Media Empire He Built More Financial Advisers Are Outsourcing Investment Decisions Norway Wealth Fund Puts TD Bank Under Observation Live Q&A: Ask Us Your Air Safety Questions 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

Miami Herald
18 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Korean financial groups offer unconventional services
SEOUL, June 13 (UPI) -- South Korean financial groups are increasingly venturing beyond traditional banking, offering services like food delivery and used car platforms, which blur the boundary between finance and daily life. Shinhan Bank, one of the country's leading lenders, has announced that its food delivery app surpassed 5 million users, four years after its debut in 2022. Initially, the service was available in just four cities, including Seoul, which prompted critics to question whether it would be able to stay alive in competition with established players. However, Shinhan expanded the service across the country in 2023 and recorded rapid growth. Now, it runs 24/7 through both a dedicated delivery app and Shinhan's banking app. "Our delivery app is aimed at supporting small business owners. Hence, we operate on a significantly reduced commission rate of just 2%,compared to the market average of around 10%," a Shinhan spokesman told UPI. "Such an approach appears to have worked, as more than 30 regional governments have partnered with us. Going forward, we will continue to focus on helping small businesses boost their sales and profits," he said. The experiment by Shinhan Bank, a representative unit of Shinhan Financial Group, is not an isolated case. Other Korean financial firms also have begun to offer lifestyle services unrelated to conventional financial sectors. In particular, Shinhan's nemesis KB Financial Group was faster in tapping into the non-finance business. Its subsidiary, KB Capital, created an all-in-one used car platform in 2016 to introduce a one-stop service for buying, selling and financing used cars. It has grown into one of the country's top three players with more than 3 million subscribers. Unlike existing rivals, most listings of the KB platform come from actual car owners rather than dealers. The peer-to-peer model not only reduces middleman costs, but also aligns with consumer demand for transparency and price fairness, according to the company. "In 2016, the used car transactions business in Korea was widely regarded as a 'lemon market.' Consumers were concerned that they couldn't be sure of a vehicle's true condition or history. We attempted to deal with that," a KB Capital representative said. "By focusing on real-owner listings, integrating financing options,and providing vehicle warranties, we've helped reshape the used car market into one that consumers can finally trust," he said. Market observers believe that this expansion into the lifestyle realm is only beginning although there are regulatory challenges. "The financial market here is overcrowded, leading to hyper-competition. Hence, financial groups are searching for new cash cows," Seoul-based consultancy Leaders Index CEO Park Ju-gun said in a phone interview. "But legal restrictions on non-finance business remain a major hurdle. The new administration may ease such regulations, but it seems the possibility is not so high," he said. President Lee Jae-myung from the Democratic Party was elected this month to become the country's 21st state head. He has taken issue with the high profitability of financial companies, especially banks. Suh Yong-gu, an economics professor from Sookmyung Women's University in Seoul, agreed. "We are entering the 'Era of Big Blur,' where the industry boundaries collapse. Our financial outfits are desperate to grapple with the big trend," Suh said. "However, Korean financial institutions face strict legal prohibitions in advancing into non-finance sectors. There are questions about whether all the regulations are still necessary in the Era of Big Blur. Regulatory reform will ultimately determine how far they can go," he said. Professor Lee Eun-hee from Inha University stressed the need to prioritize consumers. "While certain regulations on financial institutions are essential, the government should reevaluate them when easing those rules clearly enhances consumer convenience," she said. Beyond their expansion into non-financial sectors, Shinhan and KB have also actively supported professional athletes and sports teams. KB sponsors Park In-bee, the 2016 Olympic gold medalist in golf, while Shinhan signed a sponsorship deal with Lim Jin-hee, who placed second in the LPGA Rookie of the Year standings in 2024. Both financial groups also operate teams in the Women's Korean Basketball League, a six-team league they helped establish as founding members in 1998. Copyright 2025 UPI News Corporation. All Rights Reserved.