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Samsung Electronics Plans $59B Share Buyback, Yonhap Reports

SEOUL, June 24 (Reuters) - Samsung Electronics plans a share buyback programme worth about 90 trillion ​won ($58.61 billion) after agreeing to give stock bonuses to employees in recent wage talks, ‌the Yonhap News Agency reported on Wednesday, sending shares of the South Korean chip giant up more than 6%.

The memory-chip maker may soon announce details on the ​plan, Yonhap said, citing unidentified industry sources.

Samsung Electronics also ​did not respond to requests for comment.

Management and union ⁠last month reached a pay deal under which Samsung is ​expected to set aside about 10.5% of its annual operating profit for special ​bonuses for the chip division in the form of stocks, sparking concerns over inequality at the company.

Employees at Samsung will be able to immediately ​sell a third of the treasury shares they receive as ​bonuses, but they will have to wait for a year to sell another third ‌and ⁠a further year for the remainder.

Samsung also may need to repurchase additional stocks to award employees under a separate compensation programme, called the "Performance Stock Unit," which was introduced last October to ​align employee rewards ​with long-term stock ⁠performance, Yonhap said.

Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix are expected to post record profits this year and ​next year, as the AI boom has fueled ​a ⁠shortage of memory chips as technology firms race to build data centres, driving up prices for chips to train and run AI ⁠models.

Samsung ​shares jumped 6.3%, outperforming SK Hynix's 1.6% ​gain and reclaiming the top spot by common-share market capitalization in South Korea.

($1 = ​1,535.6000 won)

Reporting by Heejin Kim and Hyunjoo Jin Editing by Ed Davies

Source: Reuters


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