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Samsung (005930.KS) ₩600M DS Bonus Sparks DX Union Rally

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Samsung (005930.KS) ₩600M DS Bonus Sparks DX Union Rally

Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), South Korea's largest listed company, faces a staff rally on Thursday, July 16, over a pay fight that has turned its own workforce against itself. For investors, the first question is whether this threatens chip output — and the answer, on the facts available, is that the split runs along a fault line that keeps near-term production risk low while raising the harder questions of morale, retention and politics.

What happened

The dispute is about who shares in Samsung's semiconductor windfall. Under a wage agreement reached in May, only employees in the chipmaking Device Solutions (DS) division received special performance incentives of up to ₩600 million ($438,000), while employees in the Device Experience (DX) division — Samsung's smartphone and home-appliance arm — received company treasury shares worth roughly ₩6 million ($4,380, at about 1,370 won per dollar) each. The Korea Times described the resulting gap as "nearly 100-fold" (Korea Times, July 15).

The Samsung Electronics Company Union (SECU, also known as Donghaeng) — now the company's largest labor union — will rally at Samsung's Suwon plant in Gyeonggi Province under a "same company, same rights" slogan. SECU's membership swelled to 28,569 as of Wednesday morning, roughly 55 percent of the DX division's 51,700-person workforce, after DX employees joined in protest at the May deal (Korea Times, July 15). The Asia Business Daily estimated an expected turnout of 2,000 to 3,000 people (Asia Business Daily, July 6).

Crucially, the workers threatening to protest sit on the device side — not the chip lines that generate almost all of Samsung's profit. The DS employees who drove this year's earnings are the ones who received the bonus; they are not the ones marching. That is why this is, for now, a grievance about distribution rather than an operational stoppage.

Sizing the windfall behind the anger

The gap exists because the chip division's earnings have been extraordinary. Samsung guided second-quarter 2026 operating profit to a record ₩89.4 trillion (about $65 billion), with the DS division accounting for the overwhelming majority, on the back of surging High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) and server DRAM prices tied to AI data-center demand (Seoul Economic Daily / BigGo Finance, July 2026). Analysts cited in the same coverage estimated Samsung's combined provision for the special performance bonuses at ₩15 trillion to ₩20 trillion (roughly $11 billion to $15 billion) — a sum large enough that, excluding it, quarterly operating profit would have topped ₩100 trillion. In other words, the ₩600 million payouts that enraged the device workforce are a rounding item against a profit pool the chip division created and the device workers feel excluded from.

The National Samsung Electronics Union (NSEU) has made that argument explicit, contending that DX operating profits historically served as a common financial resource for investment in the chipmaking business — and that DX employees should not now be shut out while chips boom (SCMP, July 2026).

A union with a track record

The episode matters more because Samsung's labor movement has already shown it will act. NSEU, which has about 22,700 members (Korea Times, July 15), staged the first strike in the company's history on June 7, 2024, escalated to an indefinite walkout on July 8, 2024 that drew about 6,500 workers, and wound the action down on August 1, 2024 without securing its core wage demands (CNBC, May 2024; Wikipedia, "Samsung and unions"). A separate Samsung Electronics Labor Union (SELU), dominated by DS-division staff, is now pushing to keep the chip division's bargaining separate from the device unions (Korea Times, July 15). The upshot is a fragmented union landscape in which the device and chip workforces want opposite things.

The politics: a minister pushes back

The fight has already spilled into national policy. As some politicians and labor figures floated an "excess-profit distribution and clawback" for the semiconductor windfall, Kim Jung-kwan, Minister of Trade, Industry and Energy (MOTIE), pushed back at a July 15 forum on corporate investment and the future of labor. Kim invoked 1970s Britain, arguing it squandered North Sea oil wealth on "short-term consumption" instead of productive investment and suffered a "resource curse" of manufacturing decline. "If one era's windfall does not translate into the next era's competitiveness, that wealth never lasts long," he said, adding that this "is not the time to compete over who takes more, but to consider how to grow bigger together" (ETNews, July 15).

Unionization is spreading down the chain

The friction is not confined to Samsung's payroll. Semes, Samsung's semiconductor front- and back-end equipment subsidiary — in which Samsung Electronics holds a 91.54 percent stake — saw a new labor union declare its launch on July 15, pledging to organize across its Dongtan, Cheonan, Hwaseong and Pyeongtaek sites (The Asia Business Daily, July 15). Union organizing in Korea's chip sector has historically centered on manufacturers such as Samsung and SK hynix; its spread to equipment suppliers is a newer development that could widen the labor front over time.

The open question

The near-term test is Thursday's rally itself: whether it stays a one-day demonstration or hardens into the kind of escalation NSEU pursued in 2024. Beyond that, watch the 2027 wage round — SECU wants joint collective bargaining across divisions, while SELU wants the chip division to negotiate on its own. Which structure prevails will determine whether the bonus gap becomes a recurring flashpoint or a one-off tied to an exceptional chip cycle. As long as the grievance sits with the device workforce rather than the chip lines, the immediate risk is to morale and retention in the consumer businesses, not to the memory output that is driving Samsung's earnings.


This article is journalism, not investment advice. LineVest is not a registered investment adviser. Figures are drawn from the cited primary and secondary sources as of publication; currency conversions use an approximate rate of 1,370 won per U.S. dollar unless a source-reported figure is quoted. Readers should verify against original disclosures before making any decision.

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