Shares of Samsung Electronics experienced a sharp decline of roughly 9% on the Korea Stock Exchange during Friday’s trading session, reaching 273,500 won in early Seoul market hours. The significant selloff followed the National Samsung Electronics Union’s declaration that it would proceed with an 18-day work stoppage commencing May 21, rejecting the corporation’s proposal to restart unconditional compensation discussions.
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. (005930.KS)
Union representatives indicated willingness to enter renewed discussions — but not until after June 7. This timeline ensures the planned work stoppage remains scheduled.
The electronics giant saw its market capitalization shrink by as much as 99.07 trillion won ($66.18 billion) on Wednesday alone when compensation negotiations reached an impasse. Friday’s trading session compounded these losses.
Tensions have been escalating for several months. In April, employees staged demonstrations at a manufacturing facility located south of Seoul, advocating for enhanced compensation packages. Their primary objectives include: eliminating caps on bonus payments and establishing a profit-sharing framework connected to Samsung’s operational profit figures.
A significant point of contention involves the compensation disparity with competing semiconductor manufacturer SK Hynix. SK Hynix recently finalized more attractive bonus arrangements with its employees, creating a comparison that Samsung workers find increasingly difficult to accept.
Government-facilitated discussions between Samsung management and union leadership collapsed earlier in the week. The parties could not reach consensus on bonus calculation methodologies or ceiling structures.
South Korea’s government has been monitoring the situation carefully. Both the prime minister and the minister of industry have appealed to all parties to continue dialogue, cautioning that a work stoppage could negatively impact export performance, capital markets, and overall economic expansion.
The presidential Blue House also commented on Friday, expressing optimism that the walkout might still be prevented. Government officials noted that criteria for triggering emergency intervention measures had not yet been satisfied.
Samsung responded swiftly following the union’s confirmation. Senior executives journeyed to the Pyeongtaek facility for direct discussions with union leadership. The company also released a public statement expressing regret for the disruption stemming from the labor dispute, committing to approach negotiations with an open mindset.
JPMorgan analysts released financial projections on the potential consequences. The investment bank indicated that production disruption could exceed initial forecasts, attributing this to greater worker involvement than earlier estimates suggested.
JPMorgan calculated the potential damage to Samsung’s operational profitability at between 21 trillion and 31 trillion won ($14.08 billion to $20.79 billion). Revenue shortfalls could total roughly 4.5 trillion won.
These figures represent substantial exposure for a corporation already maneuvering through a challenging semiconductor industry environment.
The union has maintained flexibility — negotiations following June 7 remain a possibility. However, with the work stoppage scheduled to launch on May 21, the timeframe for reaching a resolution before manufacturing operations are affected is extremely limited.
Samsung leadership was en route to Pyeongtaek as of Friday morning, though the company has not yet publicly confirmed whether a new discussion date has been established.
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