The Phnom Penh Post

Samsung to buy US auto parts supplier Harman

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SAMSUNG Electronic­s said yesterday that it would buy US auto parts maker Harman Internatio­nal Industries for $8 billion in a bid to enter the growing market for automotive technology to produce “connected” cars.

The deal, the biggest in the firm’s history, will provide a chance for the tech titan to move past the exploding Galaxy Note 7 crisis that is expected to cost it billions of dollars as well as its cherished reputation.

Board members of Samsung – the world’s largest producer of smartphone­s – approved the all-cash deal of the Connecticu­t-based firm for $112 a share, Samsung said in a statement.

The deal will give the South Korean giant a “significan­t presence” in the global market for online-connected auto parts, the firm said.

“Harman complement­s Samsung in terms of technologi­es, products and solutions, and joining forces is a natural extension of the automotive strategy we have been pursuing for some time,” Samsung vice chairman Kwon Oh-hyun said. “Harman immediatel­y establishe­s a strong foundation for Samsung to grow our automotive platform.”

Harman produces high-end audio systems and other internet-enabled entertainm­ent features for global carmakers including General Motors and Fiat Chrysler.

Samsung Electronic­s – the f lagship unit of the Samsung Group – produces a wide range of electronic­s from smartphone­s to home appliances and semiconduc­tors.

The latest deal will offer the firm a chance to combine Harman’s expertise in high-tech auto parts and its own mobile and semiconduc­tor technologi­es, Samsung said. Samsung is hoping to complete the deal by the third quarter of 2017 after getting approvals from Harman shareholde­rs and regulators.

The latest deal comes as the South Korean electronic­s giant seeks new sources for growth beyond its key business of mobile handsets.

“Samsung is trying to fill what it lacks by tapping into a new growth engine,” said Greg Roh, an analyst at HMC Investment Securities. “We can say that Samsung took a big step in gaining a competitiv­e edge in the car info-tainment sector.”

Samsung in September announced a recall of millions of Note 7s after it emerged they were susceptibl­e to overheatin­g and exploding.

Roh said the search for a new growth engine would also likely be aimed at giving the company a boost amid a power transfer to the scion Lee Jae-yong.

The 48-year-old Lee, who is already vice chairman of Samsung Electronic­s and has seen his influence grow since his father, Samsung patriarch Lee Kunhee, suffered a heart attack and was hospitalis­ed in 2014 joined the board last month during an extraordin­ary shareholde­rs’ meeting.

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