Samsung set to rebuild with leader Lee cleared of all charges against him

Samsung Group Chairman Jay Y. Lee gives a speech during a visit by US President Joe Biden to the chipmaker’s Pyeongtaek plant in 2022

Samsung Electronics Co. Chairman Lee Jae-yong was found not guilty of accounting fraud, stock manipulation and other criminal charges by a Seoul appeals court on Monday – a ruling that will remove long-running legal risks that he has faced for a decade.

The Seoul High Court upheld the lower court’s ruling last year dismissing all the charges related to the controversial merger of two Samsung affiliates in 2015, which prosecutors said was designed to tighten his control of Samsung Group, the country’s top conglomerate.

Thirteen former senior Samsung executives, indicted by the prosecution at the time on similar charges, were also acquitted of their criminal charges.

A flag bearing the logo of Samsung flutters in front of its office building in Seoul

In January 2024, a lower court cleared Lee of all charges related to the $8 billion 2015 merger between two Samsung C&T Corp. and Cheil Industries Co.

Prosecutors later appealed to the Seoul High Court, seeking a five-year jail term, citing a separate ruling in August that said Samsung Biologics Co., an affiliate of Cheil Industries, breached accounting standards by overstating its assets to justify the merger.

Lee, widely known in international business circles by his English name Jay Y. Lee, has denied wrongdoing.

MERGER: ‘LAWFUL ACT’

“The plan devised by the defendants for the merger was a standard and lawful response in the context of a management rights dispute,” said a Seoul High Court judge. “It is difficult to judge a Samsung report on the merger at the time as manipulated.”

The appeals court also ruled that the alleged accounting fraud involving Samsung Biologics and Samsung Bioepis Co. “cannot be regarded as fraudulent.”

An employee at Samsung Electronics’ chip plant in Xian, China

Lee has been plagued by legal challenges for nearly a decade, raising investor concerns over the future of Samsung Group as it struggled to grapple with growing competition with rivals.

Samsung faces an uphill battle against Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., better known as TSMC, in the foundry or contract chipmaking business; crosstown rival SK Hynix Inc. in the advanced AI chip sector, including high-bandwidth memory (HBM); and Apple Inc. in the high-end smartphone segment and Chinese competitors such as Xiaomi and Huawei in budget smartphones.

“It took a long time. With the latest ruling, I expect Lee to focus on his work as Samsung leader,” Lee’s lawyer said after the ruling.

It was not immediately clear whether the prosecution would appeal the appeals court decision to the Supreme Court.

REBUILDING SAMSUNG WITH EXECUTIVE RESHUFFLE, M&A

With Lee and Samsung’s top executives now able to fully focus on management, analysts expect the conglomerate to accelerate efforts to regain its semiconductor competitiveness and expand into new business areas through mergers and acquisitions.

Samsung’s Galaxy AI smartphone

Market watchers said Lee will likely undertake major organizational reforms, including establishing a new corporate control tower, restructuring the board, and replacing some affiliate executives to restore internal discipline.

A major change in Samsung’s corporate structure and executive reshuffles could come as early as next month ahead of its annual shareholders’ meeting, they said.

Samsung has been absent from the M&A market since it acquired Harman International Industries Inc. for $8 billion in 2017 when Lee was Samsung’s vice chairman.

Industry officials said Samsung will actively pursue M&As and make bold investments as it needs to increase its competitiveness in areas such as AI and robots.

“Now that he’s free from legal risks and able to commit himself to active management, we expect Samsung to seek large-scale M&A deals as well as aggressive investments in future growth areas,” said an industry executive.

By Chae-Yeon Kim, Jeong-Soo Hwang and Lan Heo

why29@hankyung.com

In-Soo Nam edited this article.

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