Just days after reports emerged that nearly 48,000 Samsung employees were preparing for what could have become the company’s largest-ever strike, the crisis has taken a dramatic turn. Samsung and its labour union have now reached a tentative wage agreement, leading the union to suspend plans for an 18-day walkout that had threatened to disrupt chip production and rattle South Korea’s economy.
The labour dispute had intensified last week after workers raised concerns over widening compensation gaps inside Samsung’s semiconductor division. While the company’s memory business posted record first-quarter performance driven by AI-fuelled demand, tensions grew within the broader Device Solutions business, which also includes the System LSI and foundry units. Employees argued that profits from the AI boom were not being shared equally across teams.
At the centre of the disagreement was Samsung’s bonus structure. Union representatives demanded the removal of a cap that limits bonuses to 50 per cent of annual salary and sought a profit-sharing model linked directly to company performance. Workers also pointed to rival chipmaker SK Hynix, which recently removed its own bonus cap and offered significantly larger payouts, increasing pressure on Samsung and reportedly contributing to employee dissatisfaction and talent movement between the firms.
The tentative agreement appears to have eased immediate concerns. Reports suggest the deal includes changes to bonus arrangements and stock-based incentives, though final details remain subject to a member vote scheduled over the coming days.
The dispute had sparked concern far beyond Samsung. The company accounts for a major share of South Korea’s exports, and economists warned that a prolonged strike could disrupt semiconductor supply chains and create broader economic repercussions. Investor sentiment improved quickly after the agreement was announced, with Samsung shares rising on news that a large-scale shutdown had likely been avoided.



