Uncle of Baby Shark Producer Becomes Billionaire With MLB Deal

Shares of the Seoul-based company almost tripled last year after striking a deal to sell MLB apparel in China.

(Bloomberg) -- “Baby Shark,” the viral earworm and de facto anthem for the Washington Nationals during the team’s World Series run last year, gave its producer Kim Min-seok a fortune of about $125 million.

His uncle Kim Chang-soo is doo-doo-doing even better. He and his family have an estimated net worth of roughly $1 billion, thanks in large part to their 54% stake in F&F Co., which manufactures and sells official Major League Baseball-branded clothing, bags and ball caps.

Shares of the Seoul-based company almost tripled last year after striking a deal to sell MLB apparel in China. In June, it launched an online store on Alibaba’s Tmall, attracting more than 3.55 million visitors in two months, and opened two brick-and-mortar stores in Shanghai in December.

“Demand for the brand was driven by the popularity of its ball caps -- now its sneakers and clothing are adding” to that, Son Hyo-joo, an analyst at Hanwha Investment & Securities Co., wrote in a Jan. 7 research note. “Its duty-free stores in Korea are expanding in response.”

Discovery Channel

Another prominent F&F brand, Discovery Expedition, sells outdoor apparel under a licensing deal with Discovery Channel.

Kim, 58, got his start by joining the publishing business founded by his father. His older brother now leads Samsung Publishing, the second-largest shareholder of SmartStudy, which produced the popular rendition of “Baby Shark.”

Read more: ‘Baby Shark’ makes millions for family behind infectious tune

He turned to fashion by introducing foreign brands, including Italian label Benetton, to the local market in the 1990s.

F&F’s revenue for the nine months through September surged 38% to 580.7 billion won ($493 million) from a year earlier, according to a financial statement. The company, founded in 1992, plans to open as many as 10 stores in China this year.

Kim shared his ambitions in a 2018 interview with local newspaper JoongAng Ilbo.

“There’s no country like Korea that spends so much on clothing as compared to national income,” he said. “Fashion can come alive in a place where there are lots of people who love fashion and are keen to catch on trends. Seoul will become the global fashion mecca after 10 years.”

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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