And finally… cashing in their chips
Samsung Electronics has narrowly averted a strike by striking a last-minute deal with its South Korean workers’ union, agreeing to distribute a massive 40 trillion won (c. £20 billion) in bonuses to its semiconductor workforce.
Driven by an artificial intelligence infrastructure boom that has transformed memory chips into an exceptionally lucrative market, Bloomberg projects Samsung’s 2026 operating profits will surge sevenfold to 330 trillion won (£162bn).
Under the proposed terms, the technology giant will allocate 12% of these profits to chip employees – comprising 10.5% in stock and 1.5% in cash – over a rolling ten-year period, provided specific financial targets are met, TomsHardware reports.
Individual workers in the semiconductor division are anticipated to receive average payouts ranging between 513 million won (c. £250,000) and 600 million won (c. £294,000) in early 2027, with the equity portion subject to a two-year phased vesting schedule.
This lucrative settlement mirrors a similar ten-year, 10% profit-sharing agreement reached by domestic rival SK Hynix last September.
The extraordinary financial rewards have dramatically intensified competition for South Korean technology roles and are already shifting worker behaviour, with some staff reportedly sacrificing overseas corporate training opportunities to maintain bonus eligibility. Union members are scheduled to vote on the tentative agreement over the coming week.

