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While Lime Asset Management, which caused the fund to stop repurchase of KRW 1.6 trillion, has come up with a plan to cash in assets, funds that are expected to lose in full are continuing.

Reporter Chan-Keun Park reports.

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Lime Asset Management introduced the 'asset monetization plan' related to the two mofunds, Pluto and Tetis, to the fund sales company.

It is an indication of how long and how much money the funds invested can be returned.

It was estimated that Pluto Funds could recover 33% and Tethys Funds 45% compared to the book value at the end of October, shortly after the redemption was stopped.

That's when I waited until the end of 2025.

The recovery rate was lower than the due diligence results of the accounting firm in February. Among the funds that invested in these two funds, 100% of the loss rate, that is, a 'can' fund that funds subscribers could not get back a penny.

Only confirmed items amount to 11 funds sold by Daishin Securities, KB Securities, and Shinhan Financial Investment.

There are many that are close to tin funds, with returns of -80 and 90%.

[Lime Investment Victim: Now it's a can, almost all. I couldn't go up to -100% anymore, and the rest of them continued to go up to -100% each time the incident went off.]

The total loss was the funds that took advantage of the total return swap and TRS to invest in a loan from a securities company.

This is because the securities company's money must be paid back before the general fund subscribers' money.

Lime's trade finance fund, which has not yet been evaluated for recovery, is also highly likely to lose in full, as it has invested in foreign funds accused of multi-level financial fraud.

(Video coverage: Choi Ho-jun Kim Yong-woo, Video editing: Kim Jong-tae, CG: Bang Myung-hwan)