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Korean Arms Maker’s 3,100% Rally Tests Limit of Defense Boom

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(Bloomberg) -- South Korea’s Hanwha Aerospace Co. has emerged as the world’s best-performing defense stock as investors bet the upending of security alliances by US President Donald Trump will spur a buying spree for weapons, particularly in the affordable conventional arms the company’s been making for decades.

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Its parent Hanwha group, the country’s seventh-largest family-controlled conglomerate, is hoping to capitalize on the expected boom with a massive share sale for its weapons unit to finance large-scale investments and overseas deals. Now regulators, as well as some investors, are starting to ask whether it’s getting ahead of itself.

Hanwha Aerospace shares have risen more than 3,100% in the last five years, making it the best performing defense stock on Bloomberg’s WORLD index. It and smaller rival Hyundai Rotem have been the top two gainers in Asia’s stock market so far this year, more than doubling in value. Both are little known outside South Korea but play a key role in preparing the country’s troops for possible battle with its heavily militarized neighbor, North Korea.

Hanwha Aerospace last year won a deal to sell more K9 self-propelled howitzers to Poland, part of a weapons-supplying agreement between South Korea and the eastern European country. Expectations for overseas growth have helped the Hanwha group’s market capitalization nearly double since the start of the year to around 73 trillion Korean won ($50 billion).

“We are witnessing signs of a new Cold War as every country is seeking to strengthen its own security,” said Choi Kwangwook, chief investment officer at TheJ Asset Management with 3.8 trillion won in assets under management. “Demand for weapons is exploding now.”

Amid the enthusiasm, Hanwha last week unveiled plans for the aerospace business to raise 3.6 trillion won in what would be South Korea’s largest rights offering ever, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The company said it will use the proceeds to invest in overseas plants and buy stakes in foreign partners. That triggered a selloff that sent its shares down as much as 16% last Friday. The announcement came on the heels of its purchase of a 9.9% stake in Australian shipbuilder Austal Ltd.

Late on Thursday, Korea’s Financial Supervisory Service said that the company’s filing on the share sale was “insufficient” for investors. That echoed concerns by some shareholders who had been seeking higher returns and questioning the company’s governance. The announcement came after Hanwha Aerospace’s board approved the use its cash flow to acquire a stake worth 1.3 trillion won in the group’s shipping unit Hanwha Ocean Co. from affiliates including Hanwha Energy, which is wholly owned by the Hanwha chairman’s three sons.