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Samsung C&T Corporation
View on WikipediaSamsung Construction and Trading Corporation (Korean: 삼성물산 주식회사; stylized as Samsung C&T) is a South Korean construction and engineering company. It was founded in 1938 as the first Samsung company and was initially involved in construction and overseas trading operations. Since 1995, it has largely focused on global engineering and construction projects, trade and investments, fashion and real estate. The corporation is governed by an 11-member Board of Directors, made up of the President and CEOs of its four working groups (Engineering & Construction, Trading & Investment, Fashion, and Resort), the corporation's CFO, and six independent members.[1] Samsung C&T employs over 17,000 people. The firm is often regarded as the holding company of Samsung chaebol as it is a major shareholder of various Samsung affiliates.
Key Information
History
[edit]In 1975, Samsung C&T was designated by the Korean government as the first general trading company to lead overseas sales operations.[2] After the company merged with Samsung Construction in December 1995, Samsung C&T began engaging in global business with offices in more than 50 countries.
In September 2015, Samsung C&T merged with Cheil Industries, a Korean textile firm prominent in the fashion industry that was originally acquired by Samsung Everland in December 2013.[3] The resulting Samsung C&T focuses on fashion, food, housing, leisure, and bio businesses with its Engineering & Construction, Trading & Investment, Fashion and Resort & Construction Groups. The merger has established a third pillar for the Samsung Group, adding to its electronics and financial services.
Businesses
[edit]Engineering & Construction Group
[edit]Samsung C&T Engineering & Construction Group specializes in engineering, procurement, and construction.
Building projects
[edit]Engineering & Construction Group of Samsung C&T is best known for its role in skyscraper projects, including the 828-meter Burj Khalifa in Dubai,[4] the Petronas Towers and Merdeka 118 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia,[5] Taipei 101 in Taipei, Taiwan[6] and the Saudi Stock Exchange Tadawul Tower in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The group is also known for building the Cleveland Clinic in Abu Dhabi,[7] Taoyuan International Airport Terminal 3 in Taoyuan, Taiwan (under construction)[8] as well as Incheon International Airport,[9] Giheung Semiconductor Complex, and Raemian Apartment Complexes.[10] The construction of the third terminal of Shahjalal International Airport in Dhaka will be done by Aviation Dhaka Consortium (ADC) consisting of Japanese companies like Mitsubishi Corporation, Fujita Corporation and the Samsung C&T.[11]
Civil projects
[edit]Civil projects by Samsung C&T's Civil Infrastructure Business Unit include construction of roads, bridges, tunnels, ports, subways, and dams. Some of its most notable projects include the Mersey Gateway in the United Kingdom,[12] the Riyadh Metro in Saudi Arabia,[13] and the Busan Newport in South Korea.
Power plants
[edit]Samsung C&T's Plant Business Unit has been involved in the construction of modern power plants—both conventional and nuclear. Its past projects include the UAE Nuclear Power Complex and Emal Power Plant,[14] as well as the LNG Terminal in Singapore.[15][16]
Trading & Investment Group
[edit]Samsung C&T's Trading & Investment Group focuses on trading industrial commodities such as chemicals, steel, and natural resources, and organizes projects such as Samsung Renewable Energy (a wind/solar power cluster), the Balkhash Thermal Power Plant,
Fashion Group
[edit]In the early years, Fashion Group, formerly Cheil Industries, mainly focused on suit and casual wear with its clothing brands Galaxy and Beanpole. Besides, there was a sportswear brand, Rapido. Fashion Group diversified Beanpole into different lines of children's clothing, outdoor clothing, and accessories. It has also launched new brands in womenswear (KUHO/LeBeige) and in fast fashion (8 Seconds). The Group has been accelerating its entry into the global market, starting with the promotion of the brand Juun.J, which has presented menswear collections at Paris Fashion Week since 2007.
Fashion Group also participates in the development of Korean fashion industry through R&D investment, sponsorship, and fund-raising events. It operates Samsung Fashion Institute and Samsung Design Net, which is a channel to the latest industry news, trend insights, market reports, and research database. In order to support aspiring designers, Fashion Group runs Samsung Fashion Design Fund (SFDF) which selects designers annually.
Resort Group
[edit]Founded in 1963, the Resort & Construction Group has expanded its business scope from land development to resort, golf, food and beverage, energy and landscaping, and construction.
The Group's Everland Resort and high-end golf courses, such as Anyang Country Club and Gapyeong Benest, have been awarded the Innovative Operation for Customer Satisfaction and also received the top enterprise award in the theme park sector by the Korea Standard Association.[17] After fifty years, the Resort Group's value chain extends from construction and energy to landscaping projects. Samsung Welstory, which has grown to become the largest catering service company in Korea since the service began in 1982, has operated as a separate entity since 2013.
Corporate governance
[edit]As of December 2023
| Shareholder | Stake (%) | Flag |
|---|---|---|
| Lee Jae-yong | 18.10% | |
| KCC | 9.17% | |
| National Pension Service | 7.01% | |
| Lee Boo-jin | 6.23% | |
| Lee Seo-hyun | 6.23% | |
| Samsung Life Public Welfare Foundation | 1.07% | |
| Hong Ra-hee | 0.97% | |
| Samsung Foundation of Culture | 0.61% | |
| Lee Yoo-jung | 0.32% | |
| Samsung Welfare Foundation | 0.04% |
References
[edit]- ^ "Samsung C&T Corporation, Naver Institutional Group Dictionary: Corporate". goodmorningmedia. Archived from the original on 2019-03-27.
- ^ "Samsung C&T Clinches Large Commercial and Residential Project in Malaysia". News World. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
- ^ Choi Kyong-ae. "New Samsung C&T to be launched today". The Korea Times. Retrieved 31 August 2015.
- ^ Jung Yeon-jin. "Advancement of Tall Buildings Samsung C&T Vice President Ahmad Abdelrazaq Receives Engineering Award". Business Korea. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
- ^ "Petronas Towers". Archi Team. Archi Travel. Archived from the original on 21 March 2015. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
- ^ "Samsung C&T, expanding to the world, has won a new large-scale project". Samsung C&T Newsroom. July 21, 2023.
- ^ "New Abu Dhabi hospital to receive first patients in 2015". Arabian Business. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
- ^ "Samsung C&T-led consortium wins US$1.56 bln deal from Taiwan". Yonhap News Agency. March 30, 2021.
- ^ "Samsung C&T Corporation's vice president, head of strategic development, Kwan Young Chung, talks to Airport World about Incheon International Airport and his company's aviation investment strategy". Airport World. Archived from the original on 8 July 2014. Retrieved 8 August 2013.
- ^ Choi Kyong-ae. "Gileum Raemian to go on sale this month". The Korea Times. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
- ^ Karim, Rejaul; Hasan, Rashidul (7 November 2019). "Shahjalal Int'l Airport: Third terminal now to cost 40pc more". The Daily Star. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
- ^ "Merseylink | The Mersey Gateway Project".
- ^ "South Korea's Samsung C&T wins $2bn Riyadh Metro order in KSA". Al Arabiya. Reuters. Retrieved 30 July 2013.
- ^ "Samsung C&T completes Emal power plant". Construction Week. Retrieved 1 March 2015.
- ^ "SAMSUNG C&T CORPORATION AWARDED EPC CONTRACT FOR PHASE 3 EXPANSION OF SINGAPORE LNG TERMINAL". Singapore LNG Corporation. Archived from the original on 26 October 2015. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
- ^ "Samsung C&T Corporation | Asia Outlook Magazine". Asia Outlook Magazine. Retrieved 2017-05-29.
- ^ Kang Seung-woo. "From wild land to fun paradise". The Korea Times. Retrieved 21 April 2011.
External links
[edit]- Samsung C&T - Official corporate website
- Samsung C&T Newsroom
- Engineering & Construction Group
- Trading & Investment Group
- Fashion Group
- Resort Group
- Samsung Design Net
- Samsung Welstory
- Business data for Samsung C&T:
Samsung C&T Corporation
View on GrokipediaOverview
Founding and Corporate Role
Samsung C&T Corporation traces its origins to March 1, 1938, when Lee Byung-chul established Samsung Sanghoe, a small trading firm in Daegu, South Korea, initially focused on exporting dried Korean vegetables, fish, and noodles to China and other regional markets with a paid-in capital of 50,000 won.[2] This entity, later evolving into Samsung Mulsan, laid the foundational trading operations that propelled the broader Samsung Group's expansion during the post-Korean War era.[12] By the 1950s, it had formalized as Samsung C&T, incorporating construction activities alongside trading, reflecting the chaebol's early diversification strategy under government-directed industrialization policies.[11] In its corporate role within the Samsung Group, a decentralized conglomerate lacking a formal holding company, Samsung C&T functions as a key operational arm spanning non-electronics sectors, including engineering and construction, trading and investment, and fashion and retail.[1] The company manages large-scale infrastructure projects globally, such as skyscrapers and power plants, while its trading division handles commodities and investments in affiliates. Following the 2015 merger with Cheil Industries, it solidified its position as a de facto cross-ownership vehicle, enhancing governance and resource allocation across the group without centralizing control.[2] This structure underscores Samsung C&T's contribution to the group's resilience, with 2023 revenues exceeding 30 trillion South Korean won primarily from diversified operations outside consumer electronics.[7]Organizational Structure and Divisions
Samsung C&T Corporation is organized into four primary business groups—Engineering & Construction, Trading & Investment, Fashion, and Resort—each functioning with operational autonomy to address sector-specific demands while benefiting from the broader Samsung Group's resources. This divisional structure, established post the 2015 merger with former Samsung entities, supports diversified revenue streams and risk mitigation across construction, commerce, consumer goods, and leisure sectors. The company's governance centers on a Board of Directors comprising nine members, including five independent directors to ensure oversight and transparency, as outlined in its corporate charter.[13][14] The Engineering & Construction Group handles engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) projects globally, subdivided into areas such as housing development, plant construction for industries like petrochemicals and power, and civil infrastructure including high-rise buildings and harbors. This group contributed significantly to the company's revenue, executing projects valued in trillions of Korean won as of recent fiscal reports.[1][15] The Trading & Investment Group focuses on international trade in commodities, industrial materials, and resources, alongside strategic investments in affiliates and portfolio management. It operates through global networks, facilitating exports and imports while holding stakes in Samsung Group companies, which generated dividends exceeding key financial thresholds in 2024.[13][16] The Fashion Group manages apparel design, manufacturing, and retail, encompassing brands and distribution channels for clothing and lifestyle products, with operations extending to domestic and international markets.[13] The Resort Group oversees leisure and hospitality assets, including theme parks like Everland, hotels, and food services, emphasizing integrated entertainment and tourism experiences primarily in South Korea.[13]Historical Development
Origins and Early Expansion (1938–1960s)
Samsung C&T Corporation traces its origins to Samsung Sanghoe, established on March 1, 1938, by Lee Byung-chul in Daegu, South Korea, as a small-scale trading enterprise. Initially operating from a modest shop, the firm focused on exporting locally sourced goods such as dried fish, noodles, vegetables, and fruits primarily to China and its Manchurian territories, while importing machinery, textiles, and other essentials to meet domestic needs. This foundational trading model capitalized on regional demand disparities, enabling rapid initial accumulation of capital amid the economic constraints of Japanese colonial rule.[2][17] By the early 1940s, Samsung Sanghoe expanded domestically, opening branches in Seoul in 1939 and Busan shortly thereafter to facilitate broader export logistics through key ports. International trade networks grew to include destinations like Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore, and Southeast Asian markets by 1948, when the entity reorganized as Samsung Corporation, marking the direct precursor to modern Samsung C&T. These developments were punctuated by significant disruptions, including World War II restrictions and the 1945 liberation, followed by the Korean War (1950–1953), which forced temporary relocation of operations to Busan and emphasized survival through adaptive import-export activities in raw materials for postwar reconstruction.[2][17] In the 1950s and early 1960s, the company solidified its role as a pivotal trading house, establishing South Korea's first overseas office in Tokyo in November 1953 to support expanding export volumes, and later opening a New York branch in January 1964 to access global markets. This period saw a shift toward formalized structures, with Samsung Co. Ltd. formed in January 1951, enabling diversified trading in commodities essential for national industrialization. By the mid-1960s, cumulative experience in overseas commerce positioned the firm for broader diversification, though trading remained the core competency, contributing to Samsung Group's foundational economic footprint without venturing significantly into manufacturing or construction at that stage.[2]Industrial Growth and Diversification (1970s–1990s)
In the 1970s, Samsung Corporation, the precursor to Samsung C&T, solidified its role as a major trading entity in South Korea, achieving designation as the nation's first general trading company in May 1975, which facilitated expanded import-export operations in commodities and machinery.[2] This status supported exponential growth, culminating in a U.S. $1 billion Export Tower award in December 1980, reflecting robust international trade volumes.[2] Concurrently, diversification began with the opening of Farm Land theme park in April 1976, marking entry into leisure and resort development, later evolving into Everland Resort.[2] The establishment of Samsung Construction Inc. in February 1977 represented a pivotal shift into heavy industry, acquiring local capabilities to undertake infrastructure projects amid South Korea's rapid industrialization.[2] By 1982, the company secured U.S. $1 billion in overseas construction orders, becoming the first Korean firm to issue commercial paper worth U.S. $25 million in the U.S. market, signaling enhanced global engineering prowess.[2] Fashion diversification accelerated with the launch of the men's clothing brand Rogatis in November 1979 and Galaxy in July 1983, leveraging licensing and domestic manufacturing to capture consumer markets.[2] The 1980s and 1990s saw further expansion, including the casual brand Beanpole in February 1989 and the Samsung Fashion R&D Center in May 1993, integrating research into apparel innovation.[2] Overseas ventures included railway vehicle exports to Nigeria in January 1988 and an onshore oil field development contract in Algeria in November 1991, bolstering the trading and construction synergy.[2] Resort enhancements, such as the Rose Festival at Farm Land in June 1985 and Caribbean Bay water park in July 1996, diversified leisure offerings.[2] Culminating in the December 1995 merger of Samsung Corporation and Samsung Construction, these efforts drove cumulative exports to U.S. $10 billion by November 1994, with entry into nuclear construction via the Uljin Power Plant in April 1997.[2]Restructuring and the 2015 Merger
In the early 2010s, Samsung C&T underwent internal restructuring to streamline operations, including the transfer of its real estate business to S1 Corporation in 2013, aimed at focusing core competencies in trading, construction, and fashion.[18] This move was part of broader Samsung Group efforts to enhance efficiency amid slowing growth in traditional sectors and prepare for leadership succession following Chairman Lee Kun-hee's health issues.[19] The pivotal event occurred on May 25, 2015, when Cheil Industries, a de facto holding company controlled by the Lee family through its predecessor Everland, announced an all-stock acquisition of Samsung C&T valued at approximately $7.7 billion.[20] Under the terms, Cheil offered 0.35 of its new shares for each Samsung C&T share, a ratio criticized by analysts for undervaluing Samsung C&T's assets—particularly its stakes in key affiliates like Samsung Electronics—while overvaluing Cheil's portfolio of construction, fashion, and leisure businesses.[21] The merger sought to consolidate the Lee family's influence by placing Samsung C&T's valuable holdings under a single entity more directly aligned with heir Lee Jae-yong, thereby tightening control over the Samsung Group's circular ownership structure without injecting new capital.[22] Opposition mounted from activist investors, notably Elliott Management, which argued the deal transferred wealth from minority shareholders to the controlling family and urged rejection to demand a fairer ratio.[22] Public and institutional scrutiny intensified, with allegations of conflicts of interest involving National Pension Service votes and potential market manipulation, though subsequent investigations cleared Lee Jae-yong of related charges in 2025.[23] Despite protests, Samsung C&T shareholders approved the merger on July 16, 2015, by a narrow margin, enabling completion later that year.[20] Post-merger, the combined entity retained the Samsung C&T name, integrating Cheil's operations to form a diversified platform spanning engineering, trading, fashion, and resorts, positioned as a "global business partner and lifestyle innovator."[2] This restructuring bolstered the Lee family's effective control to around 5% direct ownership but significant cross-holdings, averting dilution risks in the chaebol's succession amid South Korea's regulatory push against opaque governance.[22]Post-Merger Evolution and Recent Initiatives (2016–Present)
Following the 2015 merger with Cheil Industries, Samsung C&T integrated its expanded portfolio, combining the former's fashion, retail, and resort operations with the latter's engineering, construction, and trading strengths to form a unified entity focused on global business partnerships and lifestyle innovation. This restructuring enabled cross-divisional synergies, such as leveraging construction expertise for resort developments and trading networks for fashion supply chains, while positioning the company as a key affiliate in the Samsung Group's value chain. By 2016, amid broader group reforms prompted by governance scrutiny, Samsung C&T emphasized operational efficiency and international expansion, ranking first in South Korea's construction capability assessments multiple times thereafter.[12] In the engineering and construction sector, the company shifted toward sustainable infrastructure, securing high-profile renewable energy contracts. In September 2025, Samsung C&T won the bid for Qatar's largest solar power project in Dukhan, a 2,000 MW facility spanning 27 square kilometers with 2.74 million panels, reinforcing its leadership in Middle East renewables. Earlier that year, in May 2025, it partnered with Qatar Free Zones (QFZ) on five green initiatives, including a 285 MW solar farm, a solar technology center, off-grid rooftop solar systems, a low-carbon bioproducts plant, and a digital agriculture project. Nuclear energy pursuits advanced through a July 2025 memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Emirates Nuclear Energy Corporation (ENEC) for joint investments in small modular reactors (SMRs), new builds, and mergers & acquisitions across the US, UAE, and other markets. In October 2025, Samsung C&T allied with GE Vernova Hitachi Nuclear Energy to deploy the BWRX-300 SMR technology globally.[24][25][26][27] Emerging technology integrations marked further evolution, with Samsung C&T entering AI infrastructure in October 2025 via a strategic partnership with OpenAI, alongside Samsung Heavy Industries, to develop global data centers emphasizing joint development in high-performance computing and energy-efficient facilities. Internally, its DxP (Design, Experience, Platform) Business Strategy Team, highlighted in October 2025, prioritized robotics for automation, wellness solutions for smart buildings, and open innovation platforms to blend construction with digital ecosystems. These initiatives complemented ongoing trading and investment activities, including battery recycling and SMR commercialization, amid resolutions to legacy merger disputes, such as prevailing in a May 2025 court ruling against Elliott Management's claims for additional interest on Cheil merger appraisal rights. Fashion and resort segments sustained growth through integrated supply chains, though specific post-merger metrics reflected stabilized operations without major divestitures.[28][29][30]Core Business Operations
Engineering and Construction Activities
The Engineering and Construction (E&C) Group of Samsung C&T Corporation provides end-to-end services in design, engineering, procurement, and construction across building, civil infrastructure, plant facilities, and housing sectors.[31] Established through the evolution of Samsung Construction Inc. in 1977 and subsequent mergers, the group has executed projects globally since obtaining overseas construction licensing in 1980, achieving $1 billion in international orders by 1982.[12] It maintains operations in over 50 countries, emphasizing large-scale, high-complexity developments such as skyscrapers, bridges, power plants, and residential complexes.[31] In the building sector, the E&C Group has constructed landmark high-rises, including the Burj Khalifa in Dubai (completed 2010, world's tallest at 828 meters), Petronas Twin Towers in Malaysia (1997), Taipei 101 in Taiwan (2001), and Merdeka 118 in Malaysia (completed 2024, second-tallest globally).[12] These projects demonstrate capabilities in advanced structural engineering for extreme heights and environmental resilience. In civil infrastructure, notable achievements include the Incheon Bridge (opened 2009, Korea's longest cable-stayed bridge at 18.247 km with an 800-meter main span, designed to withstand magnitude 7 earthquakes and 200 km/h winds) and the Yeongjong Bridge (world's first self-anchored suspension bridge).[32] Other civil works encompass railways like the Gyeongbu High-Speed Railway, ports such as Busan New Port, and international tunnels including Australia's West Connex and the UK's Mersey Gateway.[32] The plant division focuses on industrial facilities, including exported Korean nuclear power plants, refineries, and renewable energy projects. Recent contracts include Qatar's largest solar power plant (awarded September 2025, valued at 1.46 trillion won or $1.06 billion) and a desalination and power plant project (secured 2024).[33][12] In housing, the Raemian brand has led customer satisfaction rankings in Korea's National Customer Satisfaction Index (NCSI) for 25 consecutive years as of 2022, delivering modular and high-density residential developments.[12] The group integrates technologies like AI for site management, off-site modular construction, and robotic precision tools to enhance efficiency, safety, and sustainability, as seen in heat protection protocols and smart building solutions.[34][35] In 2024, it completed Saudi Arabia's first metro system and expanded into pumped hydro storage in Australia via the Marinus Link project.[12][36] These activities underscore a focus on resilient, innovative infrastructure amid global energy transitions and urbanization demands.Trading and Investment Portfolio
The Trading & Investment Group of Samsung C&T Corporation primarily engages in global trading of industrial commodities, including chemicals, steel products, energy resources, natural materials, and living essentials, while also providing logistics and supply chain solutions for materials and components.[3][37] This division operates worldwide, focusing on sectors such as chemicals, steel, energy, and raw materials, with an emphasis on environmentally conscious projects to support sustainable supply chains.[3] In the second quarter of 2025, the group's revenue reached KRW 3.776 trillion, an increase of KRW 377 billion from KRW 3.399 trillion in the same period of 2024, driven by expanded trading volumes in key commodities.[38] Investment activities within the group include equity stakes in Samsung Group affiliates, from which Samsung C&T received KRW 720 billion in dividends in 2024, exceeding its own dividend payouts of KRW 419 billion that year.[16] The portfolio extends to strategic ventures, such as a joint equity investment of $110 million in GRAIL Inc. announced on October 17, 2025, alongside Samsung Electronics, aimed at introducing GRAIL's Galleri multi-cancer early detection test to Asian markets.[39] These investments support diversification into new business areas, including offshore projects and innovative technologies, complementing the core trading operations.[4] Despite a 19% year-over-year revenue decline in the trading and investment division during 2024, attributed to fluctuating commodity prices, the group maintains a focus on stabilizing returns through affiliate dividends and selective global opportunities.[40]Fashion and Retail Segments
The Fashion Group of Samsung C&T Corporation manages the design, production, wholesale distribution, and retail of apparel and lifestyle products, positioning itself as a leader in South Korea's fashion industry. Formed in 1982 as the Samsung Everland Fashion Group and rebranded under Samsung C&T in 2005 following corporate restructuring, the division pioneered Korea's textile and apparel sectors by advancing fabric development and export activities starting in the 1950s. It operates proprietary brands alongside the importation and retailing of international luxury labels, focusing on premium casual, fast fashion, and sportswear segments.[41] Proprietary brands form the core of its portfolio, including Bean Pole, a premium casual line with sub-brands for men's tailored menswear, women's collections, golf apparel, and accessories, emphasizing elegant design and high-quality materials. Other key labels encompass 8 Seconds, a specialty store apparel (SPA) brand launched on February 20, 2012, in Seoul's Garosu-gil district, which delivers trendy, affordable fast-fashion items inspired by global street styles and consumer trends within an eight-second impression framework; Galaxy for casual wear; and Kuho for women's fashion. The group also handles global branding for select designers and extends into lifestyle and sports categories.[42][13][43] Retail operations integrate physical and digital channels, with over 1,800 stores worldwide spanning department store concessions, flagship outlets, and pop-up locations in more than 30 countries across Asia, North America, and Europe. The SSF Shop e-commerce platform serves as a multi-brand hub, aggregating proprietary lines, imported luxury goods, and third-party offerings to facilitate direct-to-consumer sales and logistics. Supported by a workforce exceeding 2,000 employees, these activities emphasize efficient supply chain management, from inventory procurement to experiential retail formats that blend fashion with cultural elements.[41][13] Global expansion drives retail growth through strategic store openings and partnerships, such as the debut of an 8 Seconds flagship in the Philippines in 2023, marking entry into Southeast Asian markets with localized adaptations of Korean fashion trends. The division imports and wholesales brands like Theory and Tory Burch for domestic retail, while licensing its own labels internationally to capitalize on K-fashion's rising profile. This multifaceted approach sustains operations amid fluctuating consumer demands, with a focus on sustainability initiatives in material sourcing and eco-friendly production.[44][41]Resort and Hospitality Ventures
Samsung C&T Corporation's Resort Group, originating from Donghwa Real Estate founded in 1963 to construct the Samsung Group's headquarters, has evolved into a key division handling leisure, real estate, and hospitality services.[45] The entity underwent name changes, including to JoongAng Development in 1967 and later Samsung Everland, reflecting its expansion into comprehensive lifestyle infrastructure.[45] Operations encompass theme parks, water parks, golf courses, food and beverage outlets, energy management, and landscaping, with a primary focus on domestic South Korean facilities.[46] The division's flagship is Everland, Korea's largest theme park, which opened in 1976 and integrates amusement attractions, a safari zone, and seasonal events to draw family visitors.[47] Complementing Everland, Caribbean Bay water park commenced operations in 1996, offering aquatic entertainment within the same resort complex.[45] Samsung Everland, a core subsidiary, oversees these assets alongside hotel accommodations and resort properties to provide end-to-end hospitality experiences.[48] Additional ventures include premium golf resorts, such as Anyang Country Club, which opened to the public in June 1968 and supports the group's high-end leisure portfolio.[18] The Resort Group emphasizes integrated developments, incorporating construction expertise for eco-friendly and modular facilities tailored to hospitality needs.[45] Recent activities feature collaborative themed zones, including a Netflix partnership announced for a new area at Everland in September 2023, and seasonal festivals like the "Everland of Oz" event launched on September 5, 2025.[49][50]Financial Performance
Revenue Trends and Profitability
Samsung C&T Corporation's consolidated revenue expanded markedly following the 2015 merger with Cheil Industries, rising from approximately 19.7 trillion South Korean won (KRW) in 2015 to 37.9 trillion KRW by 2019, driven by synergies in trading, construction, and fashion operations.[51] The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic caused a contraction to 34.5 trillion KRW in 2020, after which revenue recovered to a peak of 43.2 trillion KRW in 2021 amid rebounding global trade and project executions.[52] Subsequent years saw stabilization around 42 trillion KRW, with 42.1 trillion KRW recorded in both 2023 and 2024, reflecting diversified revenue streams including engineering projects for semiconductor facilities and resilient trading activities despite cyclical pressures in commodities and retail.[52][53] Profitability metrics demonstrated steady improvement post-2020, with operating profit climbing from 1.2 trillion KRW in 2020 to 3.1 trillion KRW in 2023, yielding operating margins that advanced from roughly 3.5% to 7.3%.[52] Net profit attributable to owners followed suit, increasing from 1.6 trillion KRW in 2020 to 2.2 trillion KRW in 2023, supported by cost efficiencies, milestone payments from large-scale construction contracts, and contributions from investment portfolios.[52] EBITDA margins hovered around 11.6% in recent trailing twelve months, underscoring operational resilience amid revenue volatility.[54]| Year | Revenue (trillion KRW) | Operating Profit (trillion KRW) | Net Profit (trillion KRW) | Operating Margin (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 34.5 | 1.2 | 1.6 | 3.5 |
| 2021 | 43.2 | 2.6 | 2.0 | 6.0 |
| 2022 | 41.9 | 2.9 | 2.2 | 6.9 |
| 2023 | 42.1 | 3.1 | 2.2 | 7.3 |
| 2024 | 42.1 | N/A | ~2.0 (TTM) | N/A |
Key Metrics and Market Position
As of the trailing twelve months ending in 2024, Samsung C&T Corporation generated consolidated revenue of 40.06 trillion South Korean won (KRW) and net profit of 1.98 trillion KRW.[57] The company's profit margin stood at 5.02%, with a return on assets of 2.67%.[8] Its market capitalization reached 34.09 trillion KRW as of October 24, 2025, reflecting a 42.45% increase over the prior year, while the stock traded at approximately 209,000 KRW per share on October 23, 2025.[58][59]| Key Metric | Value | Period/Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 40.06 trillion KRW | Trailing twelve months (2024) |
| Net Profit | 1.98 trillion KRW | Trailing twelve months (2024) |
| Market Capitalization | 34.09 trillion KRW | As of October 24, 2025 |
| Profit Margin | 5.02% | Fiscal year ending December 31, 2024 |
| Return on Assets | 2.67% | Trailing twelve months |
| Employees | 9,179 | As of 2025 |
