Investors have called on South Korean company to set up holding and operating units as it deals with Galaxy Note 7 recall and prepares for succession

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

Samsung Electronics has said it is considering splitting in two, to allow heir-apparent Lee Jae-yong to take over the firm from his father, Lee Kun-hee, and address governance concerns.

Samsung has also come under pressure from foreign investors, including the US hedge fund Elliott Management, to improve its corporate governance through the establishment of a holding company and to increase dividends for shareholders.

The move comes as it struggles to contain the fallout from a global recall of its Galaxy Note 7 smartphone prompted by exploding batteries.

Samsung said in a statement it would consider breaking the company into a holding firm and a producing and operating unit. It would take at least six months to study the option.

Analysts said a split would give Samsung Electronics’ vice-chairman, Lee Jae-yong, a tighter grip on the company through a holding firm.

Elliott and other investors have urged Samsung to set up a holding company as a way to address its complicated layers of cross-shareholdings with sister companies.

They also said the company should increase dividends for shareholders.

Samsung said it would increase per-share dividends by 36% this year to 28,500 won (US$24.38).