The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Verdict for Samsung heir weighs on telecom giant

-

In South Korea, such decisions are often endorsed by the patriarch of a ruling family.

SEOUL: The heir to the Samsung empire faces the verdict in his corruption trial tomorrow (Friday), which threatens to leave the world’s biggest smartphone maker rudderless for more than a decade.

Lee Jae-Yong, vice chairman of Samsung Electronic­s and the son of Samsung group chairman Lee Kun-Hee, has been groomed all his life to take over the giant conglomera­te founded by his grandfathe­r in 1938.

It is by far the largest of the chaebols, the family-controlled firms that dominate Asia’s fourth-largest economy, which some South Koreans self-mockingly dub the ‘Republic of Samsung’.

Its turnover is equivalent to a fifth of the national GDP and it has long had close, opaque connection­s with political authoritie­s.

But now prosecutor­s have demanded a 12-year sentence for Samsung’s 49-year-old ‘crown prince’ if he is convicted of charges including bribery and embezzleme­nt in connection with the corruption scandal that brought down president Park Geun-Hye.

Park, dismissed from office in March after public fury, is on trial separately accused of offering policy favours to tycoons including Lee who enriched her secret confidante Choi Soon-Sil, with Samsung handing over around $40 million.

Lee has been detained during his trial, and the prospect of his being imprisoned for years has sent shockwaves through Samsung, where the founding family’s rule has been taken for granted for decades. The Lee clan directly owns about five percent of Samsung Electronic­s shares, but maintains its grip on the wider group through a byzantine web of cross-ownership stakes involving dozens of companies.

Although Samsung’s day-today business is maintained by the elite CEOs at each unit, analysts say they would be unwilling to make – and take responsibi­lity for – costly decisions over largescale acquisitio­ns or investment­s without family approval.

“In South Korea, such decisions are often endorsed by the patriarch of a ruling family,” said Chung Sun-Sup, the head of corporate analysis firm chaebul.com.

Lee Jae-Yong’s sister Boo-Jin, who is in charge of the group’s fast-growing hotel business, was once touted as a potential standin.

But many dismiss the possibilit­y, saying she has few allies and little management experience at Samsung Electronic­s – the crown jewel of the group.

Despite Lee’s absence Samsung Electronic­s has reported stellar profits in recent months, sending its share price soaring, thanks to booming demand for its memory chips used in computers, servers and mobile gadgets.

Analysts say it is reaping the benefit of radical decisions made years ago under the senior Lee’s rule, including the constructi­on of new chip factories that cost billions of dollars.

“With so much uncertaint­y at its leadership, Samsung may move more slowly than before to make the kind of bold, large-scale investment­s that made it so successful today,” Chung told AFP.

Since the senior Lee was left bedridden by a heart attack in 2014, Samsung has stepped up attempts to streamline itself, selling off marginal or less profitable businesses, while also enhancing Lee Jae-Yong’s authority.

Those efforts would be suspended if Lee receives a lengthy jail term, Chung said, which could force the group into “an unpreceden­ted experiment” of operating without direct Lee family control.

But Geoffrey Cain, the author of a forthcomin­g book on Samsung, pointed out Samsung Electronic­s had been able to make strategic moves despite Lee’s detention in custody.

“The leader being in jail is a familiar story for chaebol groups, and one they can get around,” he said.

“Samsung will not be doomed without Jay Lee. Even if he gets a prison sentence, Samsung will be just fine. It’s up to the specialist­s to make their own decisions.”

After the scandal sparked

Chung Sun-Sup, chaebul.com head of corporate analysis

nationwide calls to reform ‘corrupt’ chaebols, Samsung earlier this year disbanded its Future Strategy Office – a small, secretive group of top company veterans who directly served the Lees – vowing to give the board of directors a bigger role in decision-making.

New President Moon Jae-In won a sweeping election victory in May with promises of weeding out deep-rooted, corrupt ties between chaebols and regulators.

Prosecutor­s accuse Lee of seeking state approval for a controvers­ial 2015 merger of two Samsung units seen as a key step to ensuring his accession.

He pleaded not guilty, saying he was not involved in decisions over the donations and not even aware of Choi’s existence.

During his trial, his lawyers and ex-members of the Future Strategy Office tried to portray him as an inexperien­ced, naive heir not even allowed to “meddle with” decisions made by the veteran executives chosen by his father.

As a legal strategy it is undoubtedl­y embarrassi­ng, but it remains to be seen whether the three judges hearing the case, in which four other top Samsung executives are also accused, are convinced.

“If he is found innocent and walks away, it would be a huge setback against the court and the current administra­tion,” said Shim Jung-Taik, an author of several books on Samsung and its history.

He warned of “huge public outcry” in the event of an acquittal, telling AFP: “In South Korea, the Lee case is not just a legal case but a social and political one whose result is seen as a verdict on wider chaebol culture and corruption.” — AFP

 ??  ?? It is by far the largest of the chaebols, the family-controlled firms that dominate Asia’s fourth-largest economy, which some South Koreans self-mockingly dub the ‘Republic of Samsung’. — AFP photo
It is by far the largest of the chaebols, the family-controlled firms that dominate Asia’s fourth-largest economy, which some South Koreans self-mockingly dub the ‘Republic of Samsung’. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia