Samsung Electronics Retail Shareholders Sue for Register Access in Fight Over ₩600 Million Worker Bonuses
Act, a Korean certification-based platform that organizes minority investors into shareholder associations, said on June 10 it has filed a court injunction seeking to inspect and copy the shareholder register of Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), Korea's largest company by market value. The procedural step is small; the fight behind it is not. Act is contesting a roughly 10-year labor agreement that channels a fixed percentage of operating profit into worker bonuses — a payout structure the group argues is, in substance, a distribution of company funds that should require a shareholder vote.
What the shareholders are actually contesting
The dispute traces to a tentative wage settlement Samsung's management and union reached on May 20, 2026, which averted a strike by tens of thousands of workers. Under the deal, bonuses are funded from a pool equal to 12% of pre-tax operating profit — a 1.5% Overall Performance Incentive (OPI) plus a 10.5% Special Management Performance Bonus, according to Seoul Economic Daily (en.sedaily.com). The same report put the top combined payout for memory-division (Device Solutions) staff at about ₩600 million ($438,000), versus roughly ₩210 million ($153,000) for non-memory chip staff in System LSI and foundry, and about ₩6 million in stock compensation for the consumer-facing Device eXperience (DX) division.
The shareholder objection is legal, not just one of optics. Activist groups have argued the arrangement runs afoul of Article 462 of Korea's Commercial Act, which governs the procedure for calculating distributable profit, contending that funds cannot flow out of the company on this scale without a shareholders' meeting resolution (en.sedaily.com). Act frames the 10-year horizon as the core problem: a long-running claim on operating profit set without shareholder consent.
Why the register matters
Act says it first asked to inspect the register on May 20, followed up by official email on June 3 and June 5, and received no substantive reply within the deadline despite the company confirming receipt — a gap of nearly 20 days, per Digital Daily (ddaily.co.kr). The register is the lever, not the goal. The platform says it currently represents about 14,700 participating Samsung shareholders with certified holdings of roughly ₩1.6 trillion ($1.17 billion), and intends, once it obtains the register, to mail at least 10,000 shareholders directly to organize a campaign pressing for mandatory shareholder-meeting approval of operating-profit-linked bonuses (ddaily.co.kr; Yonhap). If the company keeps refusing, Act says it will pursue further injunctions and a main-bench suit.
The sizing question for any large holder is exposure versus leverage. The contested mechanism is recurring — a percentage of pre-tax operating profit each year for a decade — rather than a one-time charge, which is what gives the governance challenge its weight. On the other side, Act's organizing target is procedural reach: under the Commercial Act, a derivative suit requires clearing a 1% ownership threshold, a level activist groups have publicly set as their aim (en.sedaily.com).
The bigger backdrop
The filing fits a broader pattern. Korean legal analysts have documented a rising wave of "minority stakes as weapons" activism since 2025, powered partly by Commercial Act changes and by certification platforms such as Act that aggregate small holders into associations able to exercise inspection, convocation and derivative-suit rights (Lexology; economy.ac). What is novel here is the target: these tools have mostly been deployed against small and mid-cap names, not the country's bellwether large-cap.
What to watch
The near-term signal is the court's ruling on the register-inspection injunction, which determines whether Act can begin its mail campaign at all. Beyond that, two data points will show whether the challenge has teeth: whether Act assembles the 1% stake needed to file a derivative suit, and whether any board resolution formally approving or executing the bonus agreement is scheduled — the action activists have said they would move to nullify. Samsung Electronics had not publicly detailed its response to the injunction as of Act's June 10 announcement, per Yonhap.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Figures are drawn from the cited sources and reflect information available as of June 10, 2026. Currency conversions use an approximate rate of 1 USD = 1,370 KRW.



