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Samsung's 12% Bonus Pact Faces Shareholder Test; KEF Warns ILO of Contagion

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Samsung's 12% Bonus Pact Faces Shareholder Test; KEF Warns ILO of Contagion

A Samsung Electronics shareholder group on Thursday demanded a general-meeting vote on the chipmaker's 12% profit-sharing pact with its union, hours before the Korea Enterprise Federation's chairman flew to Geneva to warn the ILO of "N-percent" pay-share contagion.

SEOUL, May 22 — Samsung Electronics' (005930.KS) twelve-percent profit-sharing pact may have averted an 18-day chip strike, but it could set off shareholder-duty challenges and a wave of "N-percent" bonus demands across Korea's largest employers, with the Korea Enterprise Federation (KEF) flying to Geneva to warn the International Labor Organization of contagion risk, Yonhap reported.

Under the pending compensation framework, Samsung's memory-semiconductor employees are slated to receive bonuses equivalent to roughly 12% of the chip division's annual operating profit — translating into about ₩600 million ($430,000) per engineer in the inaugural cycle, according to reports including newsis on May 21.

The Korea Stockholders' Alliance, a domestic activist group, said the labor agreement is "illegitimate" without a vote of share-owners and called on Samsung to convene a general meeting to ratify the pact. "Shareholders are not the enemy of employees," the group said in a statement carried by Hankyung and Yonhap on Thursday morning, "but the company must put the agreement before the AGM."

The challenge tests an emerging governance frame in Korea — first floated by domestic legal scholars and now amplified by Maeil Business — that profit-share commitments above a certain threshold could constitute a breach of directors' fiduciary duty to shareholders. The Maeil Business commentary framed the dispute as a "test case" for whether "K-bonuses" pegged to operating profit will hold up under shareholder-duty scrutiny.

Sohn Kyung-shik, the KEF chairman, met ILO Director-General Gilbert Houngbo in Geneva on Thursday to warn that profit-share demands "are spreading" across Korea's industrial base, Yonhap's economy desk reported. The appeal is unusual for the employer federation, which typically reserves ILO outreach for collective-bargaining law changes rather than wage-structure concerns.

The National Labor Relations Commission, which mediated the Samsung talks, faces its own stress test, newsis reported on May 21, as similar "N-percent" demands begin to surface at other chaebol unions. Hankyung Finance on Thursday published a feature identifying Samsung's adjacent suppliers and bonus-leveraged consumer sectors as "the real beneficiaries" of the ₩600 million payouts.

Samsung Electronics shares closed at ₩292,500 on Thursday, down 2.3% from Wednesday's record ₩299,500 close that followed the strike-aversion announcement and a ₩1.94 trillion foreign net-buy of Samsung and SK Hynix that Nomura attributed to its KOSPI 11,000 upgrade. The Wednesday surge had lifted the broader KOSPI 8.4% to 7,815.59, the index's largest single-session move in over a year.

Whether the AGM ratification challenge advances will hinge on the Korea Stockholders' Alliance's ability to marshal the 3% minimum stake required to compel an extraordinary meeting under Korea's revised Commercial Act. Samsung Electronics' next regular AGM is scheduled for March 2027, leaving the company nine months to negotiate the pact's structure before any shareholder vote becomes binding.

Sources

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