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Samsung to spend Us$360bil over four years

Industrial powerhouse to focus on chips, biotech

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SEOUL: The Samsung group plans to raise spending by more than 30% to 450 trillion won (Us$360bil or RM1.58 trillion) over the half-decade to 2026 to shore up businesses from chips to drugs, as South Korea’s conglomera­tes grapple with growing economic and supply shocks.

The corporate giant – whose units from Samsung Electronic­s Co to Samsung Biologics Co dominate South Korea’s economy – promised in a statement to create 80,000 jobs through 2026, mostly in semiconduc­tors and biopharmac­euticals.

Samsung, run by the scion of one of South Korea’s oldest and wealthiest families, is one of a handful of so-called chaebol that are outlining investment plans as the country’s new president takes office.

President Yoon Suk Yeol, who began his five-year term on May 10, has been a vocal supporter of the conglomera­tes and made them a key pillar in his economic growth plans.

Hyundai Motor Group, South Korea’s largest automaker, has announced plans to spend a substantia­l amount of money in areas including electric vehicles (EVS), robotics, aviation technology and hydrogen-powered vehicles by 2025.

Retail and chemical giant Lotte Group said it will pour a huge amount of funds into boosting the nation’s economy, from hotels and duty-free stores to hydrogen power generation and an EV rental businesses.

“It’s a classic way of South Korean companies to appeal to a new president,” said Park Ju-gun, head of Leaders Index, a Seoul-based research institute.

“Investors need to check whether the promised amount of investment­s are actually executed or not.”

Along with the heads of other prominent chaebol, Samsung is expected to shoulder part of the responsibi­lity for driving growth in a country dealing with rising inflation and supply chain disruption­s due to the pandemic and war in Ukraine.

Samsung Group’s latest investment blueprint, which overlaps with public pledges made in 2021, comes about a year after family scion Jay Y Lee walked out of jail. The conglomera­te’s leader, who was serving a sentence on graft charges, was paroled just months ahead of presidenti­al election earlier this year.

The conglomera­te is focusing particular attention on its technology flagship, the crown jewel of a sprawling empire that spans shipbuildi­ng, technology, healthcare and finance.

Samsung Electronic­s, the world’s largest maker of smartphone­s, displays, memory chips and consumer appliances, unveiled plans last year to invest Us$151bil (Rm663bil) through 2030 to delve deeper into advanced products.

Much of that will go toward its semiconduc­tor division, which is expanding rapidly in an effort to compete with Intel Corp. — Bloomberg

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Driving growth: A man walks past Samsung television sets displayed at the company’s D’light flagship store in Seoul. The firm has unveiled plans to invest Us$151bil (Rm663bil) through 2030 to delve deeper into advanced products.
— Bloomberg Driving growth: A man walks past Samsung television sets displayed at the company’s D’light flagship store in Seoul. The firm has unveiled plans to invest Us$151bil (Rm663bil) through 2030 to delve deeper into advanced products.

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