Samsung Electronics' Shares Jump After Tentative Wage Deal Suspends Strike
By Reuters | 20 May, 2026
The union will suspend the planned 18-day strike by nearly 48,000 members while a tentative deal is put to a vote between May 22 and 27.
Samsung Electronics' shares rose as much as 6.5% in morning trade on Thursday after the tech giant and its South Korean union reached a tentative pay deal, potentially averting a strike that had threatened to hit the economy and undermine global chip supply chains.
The union said the planned 18-day strike by nearly 48,000 members would be suspended while the tentative 11th-hour deal is put to a vote between May 22 and 27.
The benchmark KOSPI was up 5.3% as of 0030 GMT.
Ryu Young-ho, a senior analyst at NH Investment & Securities, said investors were relieved that uncertainty surrounding the prospect of a strike had eased.
Still, Ryu said the agreement was not entirely positive for investors as Samsung would likely need to set aside provisions tied to higher labour costs, which could weigh on operating profit.
The company's proposal of paying performance bonuses in company stock rather than cash appeared to reflect Samsung management's preference, as stock-based compensation could lower the immediate financial burden on the company, said Ryu.
The two sides had been at odds over how performance bonuses would be distributed between the conglomerate's hugely profitable memory business and loss-making logic chip businesses, Reuters has previously reported.
(Reporting by Heekyong Yang, Heejin Kim and Cynthia Kim;Editing by Ed Davies)
Recent Articles
- GoldSea Votes: An Asian Governor in Maine...and Oklahoma?
- 'I Love the Inflation,' Trump Says of Prices Rising Amid Iran War
- China's JUNO Neutrino Detector Advances Precision in Mass-Ordering Quest
- Only 11% of Europeans View US as Ally, Survey Shows
- BYD Will Be World's Biggest Automaker in 5 Years Says Its Chairman
- US Consumer Prices Increase at Fastest Pace in 3 Years
- Traders Keep Bets on Fed Rate Hike by October
- Drone Risks Keep World Cup Security Planners Frantic
- Bill Gates to Face Congress in Probe of Epstein Case Handling
- Musk’s xAI, SpaceX Hit with Class Action over Data Center ‘Nuisance’
