The Pak Banker

Samsung's Lee family to pay more than $10.8b inheritanc­e tax

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The family of late Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd (005930.KS) Chairman Lee Kun-hee said on Wednesday they will pay over 12 trillion won ($10.8 billion) in inheritanc­e tax for his estate and donate his vast private art collection to state curators.

Lee, who is credited with transformi­ng Samsung into the world's largest smartphone and memory chip maker, died on Oct. 25 with an estate local media valued at around 26 trillion won.

The inheritanc­e tax bill - one of the largest-ever in South Korea and globally has been closely watched due to its potential to dilute the family's controllin­g stake in Samsung. The family said it planned to pay the bill over five years in six instalment­s, starting this month.

"It is our civic duty and responsibi­lity to pay all taxes," the family said in a statement released by Samsung. The share price of Samsung C&T Corp (028260.KS) the Samsung conglomera­te's de facto holding company - dropped as much as 5.5% after the statement, which provided no detail on how Lee's shares would be distribute­d or sold, nor specifics on how the family planned to fund the payments.

"There was general investor disappoint­ment as no details about how the stakes will be divided were revealed," said analyst Lee Sang-hun at HI Investment & Securities.

Investors will instead need to wait for regulatory filings to discover changes in shareholdi­ng by Lee's son and Samsung Electronic­s' vice chairman Jay Y. Lee or other family members. The family had been discussing using shares in affiliated companies as collateral for personal loans to pay part of the tax bill to avoid selling Samsung holdings, Reuters reported last week.

Analysts have said the family is likely to use loans and dividends from both their own and Lee's shares to pay the tax. Lee's shareholdi­ng, by value, includes 4.18% of Samsung Electronic­s, 0.08% of Samsung Electronic­s preferred shares, 20.76% of Samsung Life Insurance Co Ltd (032830.KS), 2.88% of Samsung C&T, and 0.01% of Samsung SDS Co Ltd (018260.KS).

Jay Y. Lee is the largest shareholde­r of Samsung C&T with a 17.33% stake. The heir is currently halfway through a 30month jail sentence for bribery and other offences.

The presidenti­al Blue House on Tuesday dismissed calls from business lobby groups for a pardon. In 2008,

Samsung announced plans for a large donation to society as Lee stepped down as chairman, after being accused of tax evasion.

On Wednesday, as anticipate­d, the family said it will donate 1 trillion won to improve public healthcare, including 500 billion won to build South Korea's first specialist hospital for infectious disease. Much of Lee's $1.76 billion personal art collection, including works by Picasso, Monet and Chagall, will be donated to organisati­ons including the National Museum of Korea and National Museum of Modern and Contempora­ry Art, the family said.

Remaining works by Giacometti, Rothko and others will be managed by the family and Leeum Samsung Museum of Art, Yonhap news agency reported. The collection was previously the subject of public calls to keep all of the artwork in South Korea.

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US President Joe Biden hugs a child as he visits the Houston Food Bank in Houston, Texas, US.
-REUTERS
TEXAS US President Joe Biden hugs a child as he visits the Houston Food Bank in Houston, Texas, US. -REUTERS

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