Samsung Electronics tops economic contribution among Korean firms

Samsung Electronics generated the largest economic value among South Korea's 100 biggest companies in 2025. The tech giant's total economic contribution reached 177.25 trillion won according to data compiled by CEO Score.

Samsung Electronics' total economic contribution reached 177.25 trillion won ($116.67 billion) last year, up 12.5 percent from a year earlier. The figure measures payments to employees, suppliers, shareholders, creditors, the government and society.

Hyundai Motor Group ranked second at 122.24 trillion won. The data is based on business reports filed by the country's 100 largest non-financial, privately owned companies by sales.

Samsung Electronics also led in shareholder returns. It returned a combined 14.16 trillion won, consisting of 11.11 trillion won in dividends and 3.05 trillion won in share cancellations. It was the only company among the top 100 to exceed 10 trillion won in shareholder returns.

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Illustration of Samsung Electronics' record quarterly profit from AI chip demand
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Samsung projects record second-quarter profit of 89.4 trillion won

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Samsung Electronics on July 7 projected a record second-quarter operating profit of 89.4 trillion won on sales of 171 trillion won, driven by strong demand for artificial intelligence chips.

The combined market value of 19 listed firms in SK Group surpassed 2,000 trillion won for the first time on June 16, driven mainly by gains at SK hynix.

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Samsung Electronics confirmed record Q1 sales of 133.87 trillion won and operating profit of 57.23 trillion won on April 30, slightly beating its earlier guidance of 133 trillion won in sales and 57.2 trillion won in OP. The results, up 69% and 756% year-on-year, were fueled by AI-driven memory chip demand, with net profit jumping over fivefold to 47.22 trillion won.

The Kospi has crossed 8,000 for the first time under President Lee Jae Myung, driven by semiconductor gains and government reforms.

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Samsung Electronics and its union failed to reach a wage deal on May 13 despite government mediation, increasing the chance of an 18-day strike from May 21. The union demands performance bonuses equal to 15 percent of operating profit.

South Korean stocks closed at a record high on May 27, driven by gains in semiconductor shares.

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