camila October 26, 2020

Shares in Samsung C&T and Samsung Life Insurance rose as much as 21.2 per cent and 15.7 per cent respectively.

SEOUL (REUTERS) – Shares in Samsung Electronics and affiliates rose on Monday after the death a day earlier of chairman Lee Kun-hee sparked hopes for restructuring and stake sales, analysts said.

Investors were betting that such measures would be needed to pay a hefty inheritance tax, estimated around 10 trillion won (S$12 billion) for stockholdings alone, although analysts were divided on which moves were most likely.

Shares in Samsung C&T and Samsung Life Insurance rose as much as 21.2 per cent and 15.7 per cent respectively, while shares in Samsung BioLogics, Samsung SDS and Samsung Engineering also rose.

“The inheritance tax is outrageous, so family members might have no choice but to sell stakes in some non-core firms” such as Samsung Life, said NH Investment Securities analyst Kim Dong-yang.

Investors have long anticipated a shake-up in the event of Mr Lee’s death, hoping for gains from any restructuring to strengthen de facto holding company Samsung C&T’s control of crown jewel Samsung Electronics, such as Samsung C&T buying an affiliate’s stake in the tech giant.

Son and heir apparent Jay Y. Lee has a 17.3 per cent stake in Samsung C&T, which owns a 5.01 per cent stake in Samsung Electronics, the global leader in smartphones and memory chips. Samsung C&T also has a 19.3 per cent stake in Samsung Life, the No.2 shareholder of Samsung Electronics.

“At this point, it is difficult to expect when Samsung Group will kick off with a restructuring process as Jay Y. Lee is still facing trials, making it difficult for the group’s management to begin organisational changes,” KB Securities analyst Jeong Dong-ik said.

Jay Y. Lee is undergoing two separate trials over suspected accounting fraud and stock price manipulation connected to a 2015 merger, and concerning his role in a bribery scandal that triggered the impeachment of former South Korean President Park Geun-hye.

His father was the wealthiest stock owner in South Korea, with holdings including 4.18 per cent of Samsung Electronics common shares and 0.08 per cent of preferred shares, worth about 15 trillion won in total.

He also held a 20.76 per cent stake in Samsung Life worth about 2.6 trillion won, and a 2.88 per cent stake in Samsung C&T worth about 564 billion won as of Friday’s closing.