JYP Entertainment and HYBE Labels are targeting the global market with their latest releases, GIRLSET and SANTOS BRAVOS. The groups blend traditional K-pop production with local genres and multi-platform content. That combination positions both projects as high-profit-potential projects. The business is clear. Music videos, concerts, merchandise, and digital content mutually sustain each other within the entertainment ecosystem, opening up promising K-pop investment opportunities. With this hybrid strategy, both groups are marking a new phase of global expansion. But the bigger picture matters more. K-pop is no longer just a cultural export. It is an integrated business that can attract international investors.
Hybrid Strategy Drives GIRLSET and SANTOS BRAVOS Global Expansion
This March marked a historic month for K-pop. JYP Entertainment launched its new girl group GIRLSET, while HYBE Labels introduced its Latin boy band SANTOS BRAVOS to the world. Together, their debuts prove that major K-pop labels are increasingly adept at exporting their production systems to the global stage.
GIRLSET, formerly known as VCHA, returned with the digital single “Tweak,” blending ’90s R&B with signature K-pop choreography. Meanwhile, SANTOS BRAVOS introduced the mini-album “DUAL,” which emphasized Latin pop and Brazilian funk in a meticulously structured production.
This hybrid approach, blending local sounds with distinctive storytelling, did more than build an audience. It strengthened Korea’s identity as a distinct cultural force, separate from the Western mainstream. The result was a broader international reach and a growing digital ecosystem for K-pop investment.
The numbers tell the same story. On the business side, HYBE posted KRW 727 billion in Q3 2025 revenue, growing 37.8% year-on-year. SANTOS BRAVOS alone drew in 100 million social media views and 100,000 Weverse subscribers.
Monetizing GIRLSET and SANTOS BRAVOS Through K-pop Investment Channels

GIRLSET and SANTOS BRAVOS open up significant opportunities for K-pop investment through various monetization channels.
1. Concerts and Tours
The debut concert of SANTOS BRAVOS at the Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City in October 2025 attracted a large audience. It had an initial quota of 5,000, which was later increased due to high demand. The show sold 10,000 tickets in record time.
Additionally, 70,000 viewers also watched the concert simultaneously via a livestream on HYBE LABELS’ YouTube channel. This achievement also boosted HYBE’s Q3 2025 revenue to KRW 727.2 billion, a 37.8% year-on-year increase. The company’s revenue from the concert segment alone tripled to KRW 245 billion.
GIRLSET led JYP to its highest revenue in Q3 2025 of KRW 232.6 billion, a 36.5% year-on-year growth, through a minimum-guarantee concert model in the United States, adopting a similar approach to TWICE, despite net profit pressure from high artist contract costs.
2. Merchandise and Albums
K-pop albums in 2026 are no longer just music releases. They are the gateway to a broader premium merchandise ecosystem, and a variety of photocards remains one of the strongest sales drivers.
JYP moved quickly on this front. GIRLSET merchandise, including t-shirts and digital music, sold through their official US store, turning a new act into an early commercial win. While on the HYBE side, indirect revenue, covering merchandise, licensing, content, and fanclub revenue, grew 22% year-on-year to KRW 249.8 billion in Q3 2025. The merchandise and IP licensing segment led the way, surging 70% to KRW 168.3 billion, nearly 42% of total indirect revenue.
3. Digital Platform
SANTOS BRAVOS introduced monthly Digital Memberships on Weverse in January 2026, offering features such as live broadcasts, direct messages, and listening party sessions, available through the app at a standard price of around $5-10 per artist per month, with 90% of Weverse’s traffic coming from global users. Meanwhile, GIRLSET fans can access exclusive content through the Bubble platform and JYP apps, which are part of JYP Entertainment’s overall digital diversification strategy.
Risk Management in Hybrid Strategy and Global Expansion

Multinational projects in the entertainment industry often face significant operational pressures. The controversy surrounding KATSEYE makes this tension visible. International artists must face a system that was initially designed for a domestic training course. That structural mismatch runs deeper than one group’s experience.
Hybrid strategies thus play a crucial role in diversifying business risks. Rather than stifling international expansion, many major agencies use this mixed approach to balance local and global markets while mitigating operational risks.
The launch of GIRLSET, formerly known as VCHA and SANTOS BRAVOS, the first Latin American boy band in the K-pop space, last March, exemplifies the challenges facing multinational idol projects and demonstrates that agencies continue to boldly experiment with new formulas.
This strategy is realized through a blend of regional musical identities, incorporating characteristics of retro-tinged R&B, Latin pop, and Brazilian funk, alongside signature K-pop elements such as precise choreography, strong visual storytelling, and serialized content releases.
This approach also serves as a testbed for labels to gauge the resilience of their hybrid model amidst global competition. Investors are likely to see its relevance grow, given that the potential for measurable returns and risk is a key consideration in any investment decision within the multinational K-pop ecosystem.
Strategic Insights for K-pop Investment in GIRLSET and SANTOS BRAVOS
GIRLSET and SANTOS BRAVOS show that a hybrid strategy can be the foundation for successful K-pop investments and global expansion. By combining regional musical elements with K-pop’s distinctive characteristics, the two groups can address the challenges of multinational operations while increasing the potential for ROI and project scalability.
Their model highlights the importance of strategic diversification, leading to the need for strategic adaptation in a dynamic business world. As a blueprint for global expansion, GIRLSET and SANTOS BRAVOS illustrate that a hybrid strategy not only expands international reach but also maximizes the value of investments in the global entertainment industry.
Join us on Kpoppost’s Instagram, Threads, Facebook, X, Telegram channel, WhatsApp Channel and Discord server for discussions. And follow Kpoppost’s Google News for more Korean entertainment news and updates.






