Samsung Electronics came within hours of one of the most disruptive labour walkouts in its history.
Nearly 48,000 workers were preparing to begin an 18-day strike on Thursday, threatening production at the world’s biggest memory-chip maker.
Then, in a late reversal, government-mediated talks produced a tentative deal.
Investors responded immediately as Samsung stock jumped as much as 6.5% in Seoul, while Korean market sentiment was strong enough to help trigger a KOSPI 200 futures “sidecar” halt after a sharp rally.
Samsung stock: How the deal got done
The turnaround was dramatic as wage talks had broken down on Wednesday, prompting the union to declare a strike that could have run for 18 days.
However, a final negotiating round, facilitated by South Korean labour officials, pulled both sides back from the edge and produced a tentative agreement that will now be submitted to members for approval between May 22 and May 27.
The proposed package gives workers an average 6.2% wage increase for the year and improves some welfare benefits, including child support and housing loans.
The bigger issue was bonuses, as union members had pushed for a greater share of Samsung’s surging chip profits.
The union had earlier sought performance bonuses linked to operating profit and the removal of bonus caps, demands Samsung had warned could create heavy long-term cost pressure.
The compromise appears to buy Samsung time.
The strike has been postponed, not permanently cancelled, and the agreement still needs rank-and-file approval.
Workers outside the semiconductor-heavy negotiations, including those in Samsung’s DX division, which covers smartphones and televisions, have complained that the talks focused too heavily on chip employees.
That leaves management with a task to settle the immediate dispute without creating a new one elsewhere in the company.
Is the crisis finally over?
Analysts had warned that even an 18-day stoppage could have had effects far beyond the strike period.
KB Securities analyst Kim Dong-won estimated that Samsung would need another two to three weeks to restart and stabilise production lines after such a shutdown, effectively creating a production gap of around six weeks.
The tentative deal removes the worst-case scenario, and that is why Samsung’s stock reacted so sharply.
A prolonged walkout would have raised questions about production, customer deliveries and global memory pricing.
Instead, investors were handed a cleaner story: labour risk has eased just as the memory upcycle is strengthening.
But this is not yet a final settlement as union members still have to vote, and approval is not guaranteed.
The bonus structure remains complicated, especially because Samsung wants to reward workers during a boom without permanently locking in costs that could hurt profitability when the cycle turns.
That is the balance investors will now watch.
The May 27 vote is the next key date and if members approve the agreement, Samsung can return attention to AI demand, memory pricing and chip margins.
If they reject it, the strike threat could return quickly.
This post Samsung stock soars 6%: Is 18-day strike threat finally over? may be modified as updates unfold
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