SEOUL, May 3 (Korea Bizwire) – Lee Jae-young, vice chairman of global tech titan Samsung Electronics Co., has emerged as South Korea’s richest stockholder following inheriting stocks from his late father, a corporate tracker said Monday.
Lee’s mother and his two sisters also ranked second to fourth, with Kim Beom-su, founder and chief of South Korea’s top mobile messenger operator Kakao Corp, dropping to fifth, according to CXO Institute.
The value of Lee’s stock holdings stood at 15.62 trillion won (US$14 billion) as of Friday, the largest among 90 family members of the country’s 60 major family-controlled conglomerates and up more than 7 trillion won from a month earlier.
In late March, Jae-yong inherited a near 10 percent stake in Life Insurance Co., the largest shareholder in Samsung Electronics Co., and shares in Samsung Group units, from his father Lee Kun-hee
The elder Lee died on Oct. 25 at age 78, more than six years after being hospitalized for a heart attack. He had been the country’s richest stockholder for the past 10 years, with his stock value reaching 17.7 trillion won as of late October.
Lee was survived by his wife, Hong Ra-hee, only son, Jae-yong, and two daughters — Boo-jin and Seo-hyun.
Hong placed second in the country’s stock-rich rankings with 11.43 trillion won, followed by Boo-jin, chairwoman of Hotel Shilla Co., with 7.78 trillion won and Seo-hyun in charge of the Samsung Welfare Foundation with 7.21 trillion won.
Kim fell to fifth place from third with 6.71 trillion won, trailed by Chung Mong-koo, honorary chairman of Hyundai Motor Group, with 5.6 trillion won; Suh Kyung-bae, president of top cosmetics maker Amorepacific Corp., with 4.96 trillion won; and Hyundai Motor Group Chairman Chung Eui-sun with 3.73 trillion won, according to the institute.
(Yonhap)