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Samsung Stock Soars as Strike Averted; Bonuses Stoke Worry

  • Union suspends planned 18-day strike by 48,000 members
  • Deal includes hefty bonuses for memory chip workers
  • Samsung gains concessions but will incur much higher labour costs

PYEONGTAEK, South Korea, May 21 (Reuters) - Samsung Electronics' shares surged on Thursday after it clinched ‌an 11th-hour deal with its South Korean union to avert a strike, although the terms which included bonuses of around $416,000 for some workers gave rise to some concern.

A planned 18-day strike by some 48,000 union members has now been suspended, while ​the agreement, which was mediated by the government, is put to a vote between May 22 ​and May 27. The union's leader has said he expects it to be ⁠ratified.

The deal sparked relief across South Korea. Samsung accounts for about a quarter of the country's exports ​and the planned strike was expected to inflict significant damage to the economy and dent global chip supply ​if it went ahead.

Samsung's shares and the benchmark KOSPI both rocketed nearly 8% higher in morning trade.

SPECIAL BONUSES TO BE MOSTLY STOCK

Ryu Young-ho, a senior analyst at NH Investment & Securities, said that while investors were relieved that the strike appeared to ​have been averted, the agreement was not entirely positive as it had resulted in substantially higher labour ​costs.

On the upside for Samsung, the plan to pay performance bonuses in stock rather than cash could lower the immediate ‌financial burden ⁠on the company, he added.

A union demand that 15% of operating profit be allocated towards bonuses was also pared back.

Under the deal, Samsung is expected to set aside about 10.5% of operating profit for special bonuses for the chip division, which houses its memory and logic chip businesses, according to the union.

A document ​showed these bonuses would be ​paid in company stock ⁠for at least 10 years and conditional upon the chip division achieving more than 200 trillion won ($135 billion) in annual operating profit from 2026 to 2028 ​and 100 trillion won from 2029 to 2035.

A memory chip worker with a ​base salary ⁠of 80 million won, for example, is expected to receive a bonus of around 626 million won or $416,000 this year, mostly paid in stock, a union source said, declining to be identified.

Samsung Electronics' chip division chief Jun Young-hyun ⁠urged ​staff in a letter seen by Reuters to "leave behind this time ​of conflict" and unite to strengthen the company's global competitiveness and long-term growth.

($1 = 1,500.8000 won)

Reporting by Kyu-seok Shim in Pyeongtaek, Heekyong Yang, ​Hyunjoo Jin, Heejin Kim and Cynthia Kim in Seoul; Editing by Ed Davies, Miyoung Kim and Edwina Gibbs

Source: Reuters


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