Let $H$ be a complex infinite dimensional separable Hilbert space. There are various extensions of the following well known result:
Theorem (Lomonosov): Every nonscalar $T \in B(H)$ which commutes with a nonzero compact operator $K$ has a nontrivial hyperinvariant subspace.
It has been shown that there exist operators $T$ which do not commute with any nonzero compact $K$. This led to the following two generalisations; the first one can be found, for instance, in the book Kubrusly, C. S. Hilbert space operators. Birkhauser, Boston, 2003 (Problem and Solution 12.4), while the second one is obtained in Lauric, V. (1997). Operators $\alpha$-Commuting with a Compact Operator. Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 125(8), 2379-2384.
Theorem: Let $T \in B(H)$ be nonscalar. If there exists a nonzero compact $K$ such that $\operatorname{rank} (TK-KT) \leq 1$, then $T$ has a nontrivial hyperinvariant subspace.
Theorem: Let $T \in B(H)$ be nonscalar. If there exists a nonzero compact $K$ such that $TK= \alpha KT$ for some $\alpha \in \mathbb{C}$, then $T$ has a nontrivial hyperinvariant subspace.
I was wondering if the following natural generalisation is true: if there exists a nonzero compact $K$ such that $\operatorname{rank}(TK - \alpha KT) \leq 1$ for some $\alpha \in \mathbb{C}$, then there exists a nontrivial hyperinvariant subspace.