Chaebols win, Singer loses: Investors OK Samsung deal

Samsung C&T (Korea Stock Exchange: 83-KR) shareholders approved a $7.7 billion all-stock takeover offer from Samsung's de facto holding company Cheil Industries on Friday, underlining the dominance of South Korea's family-run conglomerates, or chaebols.

Shares of Samsung C&T and Cheil Industries lost as much as 9 and 7 percent respectively, while Samsung Electronics (Korea Stock Exchange: 593-KR) popped 2 percent after the decision was announced.

The proposed deal is part of a restructuring program driven by the founding Lee family to consolidate power over Samsung Electronics, the prize of all the Samsung affiliates. Buying Samsung C&T would give Chiel control of the former's 4 percent stake in Samsung Electronics, making the new entity created under the merger one of the largest investors in the smartphone maker.

The move would also help the Lee family cement their grip on the Samsung brand ahead of a key leadership transfer. Lee Jae-yong, currently vice-chairman at Samsung Electronics, is widely expected to take over once his father and current chairman Lee Kun-hee officially steps down. The health of the senior Lee remains in focus after he suffered a heart attack last year.

"Looking at [Thursday's] share price of Cheil Industries, the stock was up quite a bit so I think the market was betting that Samsung would get the merger to go through," said Michael Na, Nomura's Korea strategist, adding that Samsung tried really hard to win over retail investors. Cheil shot up as much as 5 percent on Thursday.

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U.S. hedge fund Elliott Associates, Samsung C&T's third-largest shareholder, opposed the terms of the merger in a rare display of shareholder activism in South Korea, saying it greatly undervalued Samsung C&T while overvaluing Cheil Industries.

Elliott has a 7 percent stake in Samsung C&T and CEO Paul Singer has been sharply critical of the deal. Speaking to CNBC at the Delivering Alpha conference in New York this week, Singer said the merger should be rejected so it can serve as an example of more stringent corporate governance in South Korea.

His argument is persuasive, noted Ji-Soo Lee, senior consultant at the Center for Good Corporate Governance.

"For the past few years, Samsung C&T's stock price has gradually decreased. Markets say current prices don't reflect the firm's intrinsic value, while Cheil Industries has hit its peak. Furthermore, Cheil just went public six months ago so it seems like the merger ratio is quite unfair to C&T shareholders."