Scottish Daily Mail

Samsung plots a £150billion investing spree

- By Matt Oliver

SOUTH Korean giant samsung plans to plough £150bn into cutting-edge technologi­es over the next three years.

The electronic­s company said it would focus investment on artificial intelligen­ce, advanced microchips, robotics and biopharmac­euticals.

It intends to hire 40,000 people globally and wants to strengthen its standing in certain industries through mergers and acquisitio­ns.

The spree by south Korea’s largest conglomera­te was revealed days after de facto boss Jay lee (pictured) was released from jail on parole.

lee, known as ‘the crown prince of samsung’, has been in charge of the group since his father had a heart attack in 2014.

his family controls samsung electronic­s through shareholdi­ngs in samsung life Insurance and samsung C&T Corp, both of which have holdings in the firm.

But the 53-yearold has been in and out of jail since 2017 amid allegation­s of bribery and corruption, which he denies.

He was jailed for five years for bribing government officials with horses and cash, to win support for a merger of two subsidiari­es that would strengthen his grip over the group – a scandal that brought down then south Korean president Park Geun-hye.

Lee’s sentence was reduced and suspended in 2018. however a retrial was ordered the next year and lee was jailed again in January 2021 until his parole due to his ‘contributi­on to the national economy’.

As the heir apparent at samsung, he is seen as the only person with enough heft to push through risky investment decisions that could decide the company’s future but he is banned from employment due to embezzleme­nt charges he faces. That has not stopped lee in the past two years though – he has effectivel­y run the conglomera­te without even holding a board seat.

samsung did not spell out where its investment­s would fall but the proposals expand on plans first laid out in 2018.

It is aiming, in part, to maintain dominance in areas it leads in, including memory chips. ‘The chip industry is the safety plate of the Korean economy,’ samsung said.

‘Our aggressive investment is a survival strategy in a sense that once we lose our competitiv­eness, it is almost impossible to make a comeback.’

Chip rivals including Taiwan semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing and Intel are making large investment­s amid a global shortage and intensifyi­ng competitio­n.

south Korea tycoons have a history of becoming embroiled in corruption or sleaze, but many have escaped severe punishment with reduced or suspended sentences.

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