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Kakao Nears First-Ever Strike Over Pay vs. Record Profit

By MinJeKim0 views
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Kakao Nears First-Ever Strike Over Pay vs. Record Profit

Kakao (035720.KS), the operator of KakaoTalk, South Korea's dominant messaging app, said on May 29 that the compensation package sought by its labor union would place "a huge burden" on operations, hardening the company's stance two days after government-mediated wage talks collapsed and the union secured the legal right to strike (Korea Times, Chosun Biz). A walkout is planned for June, with the date and format still to be set; separately, the union has notified police of a June 10 demonstration in which about 1,200 members are to march near Kakao's Pangyo headquarters from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. (Korea Times).

How big is the demand, and against what?

The union has sought performance pay equal to 13% to 15% of Kakao's operating profit last year, according to Seoul Economic Daily; the union characterizes that figure as "merely one of the proposals reviewed during negotiations." Kakao's 2025 results were the strongest in its history: consolidated revenue of ₩8.10 trillion ($5.9 billion), up 3%, and operating profit of ₩732 billion ($534 million), up 48% — both record highs (Seoul Economic Daily; Kakao). Applied to that headline operating profit, a 13%–15% pool would imply roughly ₩95–110 billion ($70–80 million).

The gap also shows up per worker. The union is asking for total performance compensation of about ₩15 million ($10,900) per employee including restricted stock units (RSUs), while management has offered ₩10 million ($7,300) per employee excluding the stock component, according to The Elec. The sticking point is structural as much as numerical: whether RSUs — a form of equity compensation Kakao introduced with a ₩5 million per-employee cap — belong inside the performance-bonus formula. The union argues that management granted outsized bonuses to executives even as the rank-and-file pool shrank, despite record profits; Kakao counters that payouts must be balanced against future AI investment and shareholder value (Chosun Biz; Korea Times).

What is operationally exposed?

Strike authorizations passed at five entities — Kakao's headquarters plus affiliates Kakao Pay, Kakao Enterprise, DK Techin and XL Games (Seoul Economic Daily). That spread matters because it reaches beyond messaging into Kakao Pay, a fintech platform, and Kakao Enterprise, the group's cloud and AI unit. In its statement, Kakao said it would "establish the necessary response systems" to keep services stable through any disruption (Chosun Biz), an implicit acknowledgment that KakaoTalk — used by the overwhelming majority of South Koreans — is the asset most sensitive to a walkout.

Why this is a first

A June walkout would be the first strike in Kakao's roughly two-decade history, per The Elec. It also lands amid a broader shift: Nikkei Asia framed the dispute as evidence that "South Korea's workers [are] growing bolder on pay," with profit-sharing and RSU demands spreading across the tech sector after similar campaigns elsewhere. The timing is awkward for the stock. Kakao shares began 2026 around ₩64,000 ($47) and have fallen roughly 35% to the low-₩40,000 range ($30), briefly breaking below ₩40,000 intraday to ₩39,800 ($29) — its lowest level of the year — per Seoul Economic Daily.

The data point to watch

The decisive marker is whether the June walkout proceeds — and, if it does, whether it touches paid-service lines such as Kakao Pay rather than staying symbolic. The talks broke down at the second round of mediation by the Gyeonggi Regional Labor Relations Commission on May 27 (Chosun Biz); both sides say the door to dialogue remains open. A settlement near the ₩10 million-per-employee offer versus one closer to the union's ₩15 million target would mark the difference between a contained cost and a precedent other Korean tech unions are watching closely.


This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Figures are sourced as cited; currency conversions use an approximate rate of 1 USD = 1,370 KRW.

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