Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), South Korea's largest exporter and the world's biggest memory-chip maker, is on track to ratify a tentative wage deal that averts what would have been the largest walkout in its history. Combined turnout across the two voting unions reached 87.4% by 5:10 p.m. local time on May 25, the fourth day of a five-day ballot — well past the 50% quorum needed for the result to be binding, according to Chosun Biz citing union tallies (https://biz.chosun.com/it-science/ict/2026/05/25/NSPAHTLMMZEL3F7KCKDKWKJEME/). Voting closes at 10 a.m. on May 27. Seoul Economic Daily's English edition reported turnout of 87.93% at 4:30 p.m. the same day (https://en.sedaily.com/finance/2026/05/25/samsung-electronics-bonus-vote-hits-88-percent-as).
\nThe deal that the rank and file is approving is structurally unusual: a 10-year commitment to fund a Device Solutions (DS, Samsung's semiconductor arm) special performance bonus equal to 10.5% of DS business performance, paid entirely in treasury shares after tax, per Seoul Economic Daily (https://en.sedaily.com/finance/2026/05/21/samsung-to-pay-bonuses-in-treasury-shares-locking-in-talent). One-third of the awarded stock is sellable immediately, one-third locks up for one year, and the remaining third for two years.
\nWhat the strike avoidance looked like
\nThe National Samsung Electronics Union (NSEU, Samsung's second-largest organized labor group) and the Cho-Kiup Union (Samsung Group Super-Enterprise Union, the company's largest with 57,301 eligible voters) had cleared an 18-day strike for roughly 48,000 workers, or about 38% of Samsung's Korean headcount, before the May 20 tentative agreement, according to Al Jazeera (https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/5/20/why-are-nearly-50000-samsung-workers-about-to-strike-in-south-korea). For historical context, Samsung's last actual walkout was the July–August 2024 strike action led by NSEU — the first organized strike in the group's history — which ran several weeks before being suspended.
\nSizing the bonus engine
\nThe ratio is the headline number, but the absolute won figures show why the market is paying attention. Seoul Economic Daily reported that the bonus mechanism translates to projected treasury-stock purchases of ₩37 trillion ($27.0 billion) in 2026, ₩47.145 trillion ($34.4 billion) in 2027, and ₩46.725 trillion ($34.1 billion) in 2028, on Samsung's roughly ₩1,600 trillion ($1.17 trillion) market capitalization (https://en.sedaily.com/finance/2026/05/21/samsung-to-pay-bonuses-in-treasury-shares-locking-in-talent). Samsung Securities analyst Shin Seung-jin, quoted in the same article, said: \"Since steady stock purchase demand will be generated over the next 10 years, there will be a broad shareholder value enhancement effect.\"
\nFor memory-division employees, the per-head outcome is roughly ₩600 million ($438,000) on average for those at a ₩100 million ($73,000) base salary, per Chosun Biz (https://biz.chosun.com/it-science/ict/2026/05/25/RWOVNVOSLRBJZIA6DWDGWHZXA4/). DS-division base distribution splits 40% equally across the unit and 40–60% weight by business-unit results, per Tech Times' reconstruction of the term sheet (https://www.techtimes.com/articles/316905/20260520/samsung-electronics-averts-48000-worker-strike-bonus-deferral-deal-member-vote-runs-may-2227.htm).
\nThe Donghaeng wedge
\nThe Samsung Electronics Labor Union Donghaeng — a third union rooted in the Device Experience (DX, smartphones, home appliances and TVs) division that grew from about 2,600 to roughly 13,000 members — said it will file an injunction at the Suwon District Court at around 9 a.m. on May 26 to halt the ballot, according to Yonhap News Agency (https://www.yna.co.kr/view/AKR20260525045400003) and Seoul Economic Daily (https://en.sedaily.com/finance/2026/05/25/samsung-dx-union-to-file-injunction-against-wage-deal-vote). Donghaeng cites a payout gap it characterizes as ₩210 million–₩600 million ($153,000–$438,000) for DS staff versus roughly ₩6 million ($4,400) in company shares for DX staff, and accuses the Cho-Kiup Union of excluding it from voting rights after the unit pulled out of a joint bargaining body.
\nSpillover risk
\nMaeil Business Newspaper reported that unions at Samsung Electro-Mechanics and Samsung Display — listed Samsung affiliates outside the main Samsung Electronics legal entity — are organizing similar bonus demands after the DS-only structure crystallized (https://www.mk.co.kr/news/business/12057085). Cross-border, Taiwan's Liberty Times reported via Chosun Biz that some Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC, the world's largest foundry) employees are floating union organization in response to bonus-cut rumors despite Q1 2026 net profit rising 58% year over year to NT$572.5 billion (~$18.2 billion), per the same Chosun Biz translation (https://biz.chosun.com/it-science/ict/2026/05/25/LPE6WOC6VVEIXEVZPMXZKAHPPE/).
\nWhat confirms or refutes
\nThree near-term data points will settle the picture. First, the Suwon District Court's handling of Donghaeng's May 26 injunction — a successful pause would invalidate the May 27 close. Second, the final ratification result at 10 a.m. on May 27. Third, whether Samsung Electro-Mechanics and Samsung Display unions translate the current rhetoric into formal demands at their next bargaining cycles. The 10-year duration of the DS bonus framework means today's outcome will shape the company's effective buyback profile and intra-affiliate labor dynamics for the rest of the decade.
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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. All financial figures, headcounts, and dates are sourced from the cited reporting and union tallies; readers should consult primary disclosures and corporate filings before making any decisions. Currency conversions use an approximate rate of 1 USD = 1,370 KRW.
\nSources
\n- Chosun Biz — Samsung union ratification vote turnout passes 87% by Day 4, May 25, 2026
- Seoul Economic Daily — Samsung Electronics bonus vote hits 88% turnout, May 25, 2026
- Seoul Economic Daily — Samsung to pay bonuses in treasury shares, locking in talent, May 21, 2026
- Al Jazeera — Why are nearly 50,000 Samsung workers about to strike in South Korea, May 20, 2026
- Chosun Biz — Per-head Samsung DS bonus details for base-₩100M memory engineers, May 25, 2026
- Tech Times — Samsung Electronics averts 48,000-worker strike; member vote runs May 22–27, May 20, 2026
- Yonhap News Agency — Samsung Donghaeng union to file injunction against wage deal vote, May 25, 2026
- Seoul Economic Daily — Samsung DX union to file injunction against wage deal vote, May 25, 2026
- Maeil Business Newspaper — Samsung Electro-Mechanics, Samsung Display unions organize similar bonus demands, May 25, 2026
- Chosun Biz — TSMC union organizing rumors after bonus-cut speculation despite Q1 profit +58%, May 25, 2026