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TechSamsung

Samsung Has 3 New CEOs—and a Record Profit

By
Reuters
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By
Reuters
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October 31, 2017, 5:18 AM ET

South Korean technology giant Samsung Electronics (SSNLF) named a new generation of top managers Tuesday and promised to reward shareholders with $26 billion in payouts to 2020, as it reported record third-quarter profit.

The world’s biggest maker of semiconductors, televisions and smartphones replaced the leaders of its three main businesses, named CFO Lee Sang-hoon as the likely new board chairman, and said veteran co-CEOs J.K. Shin and Yoon Boo-keun would resign.

The shake-up at South Korea’s biggest company is designed to ease investors’ concerns about a leadership vacuum following the arrest and conviction of group scion Jay Y. Lee on bribery charges earlier this year.

“It’s a younger generation of leaders, but the divisional structure has not fundamentally changed,” said Park Ju-gun, head of research firm CEO Score.

The new appointees are all long-serving Samsung insiders whose elevations suggest continuity rather than any new direction at the $348 billion company.

Kim Ki-nam, 59, was appointed to lead the Device Solutions division which makes components including memory chips, the major driver of the firm’s record third-quarter profit of 14.5 trillion won ($12.91 billion).

Park Jung-hoon, a fund manager at HDC Asset Management which holds Samsung Electronics shares, said there had been “some concerns” that Kim would move to expand chip capacity and upset the currently favourable supply-demand balance.

“However, today’s (post-earnings call with analysts) said the chips business will focus on profitability, not market share – suggesting they will continue the current course without deviation, which put our minds to rest,” he told Reuters.

In other appointments, Samsung said Koh Dong-jin, 56, would head IT and Mobile Communications, and Kim Hyun-suk, 56, would lead Consumer Electronics. The changes were effective immediately.

Read: Samsung Will Make $110 for Every iPhone X Sold

Samsung said it would double dividends next year to 9.6 trillion won and keep them at that level until 2020, as it responds to investor pressure to share its vast cash reserves and catch up with some of its more generous peers.

It also said 2017 capital expenditure would be its biggest ever, climbing 81% to 46.2 trillion won ($41 billion) as it builds new chip factories and clean-rooms to stay ahead of demand for servers and devices with ever greater memory.

Third-quarter operating profit nearly tripled from the same period a year earlier, matching Samsung‘s earlier estimate. Revenue jumped 29.8% to 62 trillion won, also in line with its earlier estimate.

The shareholder return policy for the next three years ramped up guidance to a level higher than its current range of 30-50% of free cash flow to 50% over three years.

Read: Samsung is Investing $300 Million to Fund Autonomous Driving and Automotive Startups

Samsung‘s holdings of cash and cash equivalent stood at 76 trillion won at the end of September, 8% higher than the previous quarter.

While the dividend policy builds on the investor-friendly trend Samsung started in 2015, it was not as generous as some investors had hoped, analysts said.

Apple Inc has paid nearly 22 cents for every dollar it earned over the past five years, while Microsoft Corp has shared 53 cents. Meanwhile Samsung has paid just 11 cents, according to Reuters data.

Read: Samsung Hopes To Finally Release Its Fabled, Foldable Smartphone

South Korean family-run business empires like Samsung Group have a reputation for low dividend payouts and other governance practices that favour controlling shareholders at the expense of ordinary investors.

Samsung shares closed up 1.9%, while the Kospi benchmark share price index rose 0.9%. The stock has risen 71% over the past 12 months.

Samsung said the earnings outlook was positive with the chips market likely to “remain favourable” in 2018.

Profits from mobile devices jumped to 3.3 trillion won compared with just 100 billion won at the same time last year, when the company booked the costs of the withdrawal of its fire-prone Note 7 gadget.

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