Samsung Wins Approval for Key Merger after Bitter Fight

W460

South Korea's dominant Samsung conglomerate -- run by the country's wealthiest family -- secured shareholder approval Friday for the crucial merger of two affiliates, seeing off a formidable challenge from investor activists led by a combative US hedge fund.

The victory, following a bitterly contested proxy battle, will come as an enormous relief to the Samsung Group's founding Lee family as it seeks to restructure the multi-headed corporation ahead of a generational transfer of power from ailing patriarch Lee Kun-Hee.

At a sometimes fractious emergency meeting on Friday, shareholders of construction firm Samsung C&T voted in favor of a takeover by the group's de facto holding company, Cheil Industries, in an all-stock deal.

The merger had been passionately opposed by a significant number of C&T investors, rallied by US hedge fund Elliott Associates -- the company's second-largest single shareholder.

Elliott had argued that the takeover wilfully undervalued the C&T share price, at an unacceptable cost to its shareholders.

Samsung C&T executives insisted the deal made good business sense and would enhance shareholder value in the long-run, with a more competitive merged company that could target sales of 60 trillion won ($52 billion) by 2020.

"I am grateful for the shareholders who voted for the merger," C&T chief executive Choi Chi-Hun told reporters.

"We will do our utmost to ensure their support is repaid in the form of heightened shareholder value," he said.

Turnout was high, with 83.6 percent of eligible C&T voting shares cast.

That left Samsung requiring 55.7 percent of the vote to secure the necessary two-thirds majority, and the finally tally in favor of the merger was 69.5 percent.

For Samsung, victory was critical to its current strategy of streamlining and consolidating its group holdings into fewer, larger companies.

The family already controls Cheil and taking over C&T will solidify its grip on the entire conglomerate because the affiliate holds more than $10 billion in shares of Samsung Group units.

 

- 'Transitional moment' - 

Elliot had complained that C&T was essentially being offered up in what amounted to a sweetheart deal that penalised its shareholders.

The hedge fund, which had also sought to block the merger in the South Korean courts, accepted the vote result, but hinted that it could pursue other avenues of opposition.

"Elliott is disappointed that the takeover appears to have been approved against the wishes of so many independent shareholders and reserves all options at its disposal," spokesman Richard Barton said in a statement

Although the anti-merger camp lost the final vote, its muscular campaign marked a watershed moment for shareholder activism in South Korea, where family-run conglomerates, or "chaebol," dominate the economy and are used to running their businesses with minimum investor interference.

In an unprecedented show of domestic investor power, more than 3,000 individual shareholders had grouped together in an online forum aimed at blocking the C&T takeover.

"I think this will be seen as a positive, transitional moment in South Korea's corporate culture," said Hwang Sei-Woon, an analyst at the Korea Capital Market Institute.

"It  highlighted deep-rooted problems in corporate governance by the chaebol," Hwang said.

Small shareholders made sure their voices were heard during Friday's meeting, taking the microphone and embarking on long, often rambling speeches -- both for and against the takeover.

"I oppose this merger absolutely," said dentist Park Sun-Ok, who bought his C&T shares 13 years ago and said he doubted the board claims that the deal would trigger a long-term rise in shareholder value.

Kang Dong-Ok, an activist representing small shareholders, accused Samsung of playing a "dirty game" -- harassing shareholders at their homes and workplaces.

Nationalist voices in the South Korean media had sought to portray the proxy battle as corporate Korea's fight against pernicious outside influence, with some commentaries straying into far-right territory with remarks about ruthless Jewish financiers.

The remarks forced Samsung to issue a statement, condemning anti-Semitism "in all its forms".

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