Samsung Electronics sees relief and resentment after strike deal

Samsung Electronics sees relief and resentment after strike deal
Rivanshi Rakhrai
May 21, 2026, 05:52 A.M.

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Samsung Electronics (005930.KS)

Buy. The strike was the near-term downside catalyst for Samsung’s biggest chip complex; the last-minute deal removes that operational risk while AI-chip demand keeps fundamentals strong. Even if bonus resentment persists, it’s unlikely to hit output immediately, so the stock should re-rate on “no strike” clarity.

Key Risk: A new labor dispute or work stoppage returns and disrupts chip production before the next contract cycle.

SK Hynix (000660.KS)

Buy. The article flags worker migration pressure from Samsung’s lower-paying divisions toward SK Hynix. That can tighten talent at SK Hynix and reinforce execution in memory (where bonuses are already larger), supporting margins and capacity plans as AI memory demand stays hot.

Key Risk: SK Hynix faces its own labor backlash or demand weakens enough to force margin cuts, offsetting any talent advantage.

  • Samsung strike deal brings relief but deepens divisions among employees.
  • Memory chip workers stand to gain significantly higher performance bonuses.
  • Local businesses hope bonuses boost spending despite stock-based payouts.

A last-minute pay agreement at Samsung Electronics has helped avert a strike at the company’s largest chip production complex, bringing relief to South Korea’s semiconductor industry while exposing growing divisions among workers over bonus payouts.

The deal, reached after rising tensions between management and labour unions, comes as Samsung’s semiconductor business continues to benefit from booming demand for artificial intelligence chips.

While the company’s strong profits raised expectations for higher compensation, the agreement has sparked frustration among employees in less profitable divisions who believe the rewards have been distributed unevenly.

Around Samsung’s sprawling semiconductor campus southwest of Seoul, reactions ranged from optimism among local businesses to resentment among workers who felt sidelined by the bonus structure.

Bonus disparities spark frustration

While the agreement has prevented a strike, it has also highlighted widening divisions among employees across Samsung’s chip divisions.

Some workers in the company’s memory chip unit are reportedly set to receive bonuses of around $416,000.

The scale of those payouts has sparked frustration among workers in less profitable divisions, particularly in the foundry business focused on logic chips.

“It looks like those who can switch to SK Hynix will keep applying, while others will try to transfer internally to the memory division,” he added, requesting anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue.

At rival chipmaker SK Hynix, some employees reportedly received performance pay packages last year that were three times larger than those paid to Samsung workers.

The disparity has contributed to growing dissatisfaction among Samsung employees and encouraged some workers to move to SK Hynix.

Local businesses cautious over economic impact

Despite hopes of increased spending in the area, some residents and business owners remain sceptical that the agreement will significantly benefit the wider economy around the campus.

Samsung’s Pyeongtaek campus employs around 14,000 workers.

However, a local real estate agent said the economic impact may remain limited unless more employees choose to live in the city permanently, and because a large portion of the bonuses will be paid in shares rather than cash.

Another employee in Samsung’s contract chip manufacturing business said he was still inclined to support the agreement despite concerns over unequal treatment between divisions.

Relief over avoided strike

Some workers and subcontractors expressed relief that a strike now appears unlikely, although concerns remain over the financial burden the agreement could place on the company.

Jang Sung-hyun, 47, who works for a Samsung subcontractor, said he was relieved that operations would continue uninterrupted but questioned whether the union’s demands had become excessive.

Meanwhile, reactions on an online union forum appeared more supportive of the agreement and the union’s negotiating efforts.

Some users praised union representatives for resisting pressure from both Samsung and the government during negotiations.