Posted by Unknown / Wednesday, June 15, 2016 / No comments / Industry News
Samsung Heavy Industries (SHI) unveiled self-restructuring plan
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photo credit: worldmaritime news |
South Korea’s Samsung Heavy Industries
(SHI) has unveiled details of its self-restructuring plan which reveals that
the financially troubled shipbuilder plans to make the necessary workforce cuts
through an early retirement scheme and to require from its executives to return
part of their salaries, The Korea Herald reports.
The restructuring plan,
provisionally approved by SHI’s creditors, calls for 1,500 early retirements by
the end of the year. The plan also requires the executives to return around 30
percent of their salaries as of July.
Last month, the company submitted the
self-rescue plan to its creditors which, apart from job cuts, proposed the sale
of KRW 200 billion (USD 170.7 million) worth of real estate assets, and the
sale of the company’s stake in Doosan Engine.
The proposed self-rehabilitation
scheme is worth 1.5 trillion won (USD 1.27 billion).
SHI plans to suspend part of its
production facilities including floating docks in order to remain liquid
due to a lack of orders.
Samsung Heavy also proposed a
sale of its shares, triggering speculations that the company’s affiliates including
Samsung Electronics – a 17.62 percent stakeholder in the shipyard – are
likely to join forces in order to save the struggling shipyard.
Another South
Korean shipyard, Hyundai Heavy Industries (HHI), recently received an
approval from its creditors to carry out its self rescue plan. HHI said it intends to implement approximately USD 3.02
billion-worth management improvement plan by 2018.
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