The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Head of Samsung’s booming semiconduc­tor business to resign

- BY YOUKYUNG LEE

The chairman of Samsung Electronic­s Co.’s board of directors, who has been the public face of the company after its de facto chief was jailed on corruption charges, said Friday he will resign next year to make way for a new leader.

“As we are confronted with unpreceden­ted crisis inside out, I believe that time has now come for the company to start anew, with a new spirit and young leadership to better respond to challenges arising in the rapidly changing IT industry,” Kwon Oh-hyun, 65, said in a letter to employees.

Kwon plans to resign as head of Samsung’s semiconduc­tor and component business and will not seek re-election on the company’s board when his term expires in March, Samsung said in a statement.

He has represente­d Samsung Electronic­s at various occasions since the company’s heir and vice chairman, Lee Jae-yong, 49, was jailed earlier this year. Lee was convicted on corruption charges to five years in prison in August, along with four other former Samsung executives.

Samsung has two other CEOs, each overseeing its mobile phone business and home appliance division.

But the chip and display divisions led by Kwon fueled Samsung’s stunning profit growth this year.

Earlier Friday, Samsung said its July-September operating profit nearly tripled over a year earlier to a new record, putting it on track to report its best annual financial results. Analysts forecast Samsung’s 2017 net income nearly doubled from 2016 and they expect Samsung to outdo its annual financial results for the next few years, thanks to its position as the world’s largest maker of the semiconduc­tor group known as memory chips that are used for mobile devices and computer servers.

Kwon, however, thinks Samsung is in crisis and urgently needs to find new ways to fuel growth before the recordbrea­king performanc­e resulting from earlier decisions fades.

“Now, the company needs a new leader more than ever and it is time for me to move to the next chapter of my life,” Kwon said.

In its earnings preview, Samsung put its July-September operating profit at 14.5 trillion won ($12.8 billion), compared with 5.2 trillion won ($4.6 billion) a year earlier. Sales jumped 30 per cent to 62 trillion won ($54.7 billion).

Prices of memory chips have skyrockete­d globally due to the growing use of social media, mobile data, cloud computing and the emerging internet of things, which have combined to leave supplies tight. The boom allowed Samsung to dethrone Intel Corp., the long-time global chip leader, in the second quarter and has yielded record earnings for smaller chip rivals such as SK Hynix.

 ?? SEONGJOON CHO/POOL PHOTO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this March 24 file photo, Kwon Oh-hyun, the chairman of Samsung Electronic­s Co.’s board of directors, speaks during the company’s annual general meeting in Seoul, South Korea.
SEONGJOON CHO/POOL PHOTO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this March 24 file photo, Kwon Oh-hyun, the chairman of Samsung Electronic­s Co.’s board of directors, speaks during the company’s annual general meeting in Seoul, South Korea.

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