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Korea Court Rules Bond Chat on Telegram Doesn’t Count as a Deal

(Bloomberg) -- Follow Bloomberg on Telegram for all the investment news and analysis you need.

South Korean bond traders are learning an important lesson in the social media era: don’t always trust private messaging apps when doing deals.

Seoul Central District Court said in a ruling that a conversation about a debt deal via Telegram messenger doesn’t really count as a definitive contract. That’s a defeat for Yuanta Securities Korea Co., which filed a lawsuit in 2018 claiming that Hyundai Motor Securities Co. didn’t honor a debt deal made during a conversation on Telegram.

Yuanta had said Hyundai Motor Securities owes it 14.8 billion won ($12.7 million) after having agreed to buy won-denominated commercial paper repackaging dollar bonds sold by China Energy Reserve & Chemicals Group Co., one of the biggest Chinese defaulters. HMS said no deal was made because there was no definitive agreement to buy the paper.

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The decision comes as regulators abroad also clamp down on the financial industry’s use of private messaging apps. A credit trader at JPMorgan Chase & Co. was recently placed on leave over the use of WhatsApp, the latest such case to hit Wall Street. It’s also a reminder of the risks of investing in some Chinese industrial debt after Korean investors were burned by CERCG’s offshore bond default in 2018.

The Seoul court said last week that a Telegram conversation can’t be considered a binding contract because secret chats on it don’t leave a trace on its servers and conversations can be removed or automatically deleted, according to the ruling seen by Bloomberg News.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kyungji Cho in Seoul at kcho54@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Andrew Monahan at amonahan@bloomberg.net, Ken McCallum, Finbarr Flynn

For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com

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