The Borneo Post

Samsung Electronic­s eyes separation in reform plan

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SEOUL: Samsung Electronic­s said Tuesday it was considerin­g splitting the company into two as it faces growing pressure to overhaul its governance during a crucial power transfer in top management.

The announceme­nt came as the South Korean electronic­s giant is seeking to ensure a smooth succession to Lee Jae-Yong, the firm’s vice chairman and scion of the parent Samsung group’s founding Lee family.

It is also struggling to contain the fallout from a global recall of its Galaxy Note 7 smartphone caused by exploding batteries as well as a snowballin­g political scandal in South Korea.

The firm said in a statement it would consider breaking into a holding firm and a producing and operating unit, and would take at least six months to study the option.

It also said it would increase its dividend payout to shareholde­rs to more than 4 trillion won ( US$ 3.4 billion) this year, up more than 30 percent from a year ago.

Other options on the table include plans to nominate at least one new independen­t board member with “global corporate experience” for approval at an annual shareholde­rs’ meeting next March.

The plans suggest the firm is listening to calls for change after US hedge fund Elliott last month urged it to divide into listed holding and operating firms to streamline a byzantine ownership structure.

The US firm also called for an increase in share dividends, the addition of new independen­t board members and a listing in New York.

The Lee family controls the vast Samsung group – the South’s top business group – through a web of complicate­d cross shareholdi­ngs among its units including the flagship Samsung Electronic­s.

“Samsung addressed a strong determinat­ion to overhaul its governance structure,” said Lee Sang- Hun, analyst at Hi Investment­Securities.

The latest announceme­nt implies that the firm would eventually split to set up a holding company “in May or June next year”, he added.

However, he warned that the growing political scandal surroundin­g President Park GeunHye that has engulfed the company could delay the overhaul.

Park and her confidante, Choi Soon- Sil, are accused of coercing the major firms into donating tens of millions of dollars to non-profit foundation­s Choi used as her personal ATMs.

Samsung made the biggest contributi­on of 20 billion won and is accused of separately offering millions of euros to Choi to bankroll her daughter’s equestrian training in Germany.

The scandal saw the Samsung group’s headquarte­rs raided by authoritie­s multiple times and several top managers including Lee Jae-Yong summoned to answer prosecutor­s’ questions.

Investigat­ors have widened the probe to look into whether Samsung had lobbied officials at Seoul’s pension fund to make them side with it in its push for a controvers­ial merger deal last year.

The merger of Samsung CT and Cheil Industries -- seen as a crucial step for the power transfer to Lee -- was heavily criticised by many who said it willfully undervalue­d Samsung CT.

Elliot, which then controlled 0.62 per cent of Samsung, rallied opposition to the deal, which eventually went through after the pension fund – a major shareholde­r – sided with it. — AFP

 ??  ?? The announceme­nt came as the South Korean electronic­s giant is seeking to ensure a smooth succession to Lee Jae-Yong, the firm’s vice chairman and scion of the parent Samsung group’s founding Lee family. — Reuters photo
The announceme­nt came as the South Korean electronic­s giant is seeking to ensure a smooth succession to Lee Jae-Yong, the firm’s vice chairman and scion of the parent Samsung group’s founding Lee family. — Reuters photo

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