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Britain’s Billionaire Exodus Accelerates as Non-Dom Reforms Bite

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Britain’s Billionaire Exodus Accelerates as Non-Dom Reforms Bite

For nearly four decades, The Sunday Times Rich List has been the closest thing Britain has to a national league table of money. This year’s edition reads less like a celebration of enterprise and more like a departures board.

Revolut chief executive Nik Storonsky and the publicity-shy quant trader Alex Gerko have broken into the top 10 for the first time. But the headline story, according to the list’s compiler Robert Watts, is not who has arrived, it is who has gone.

As many as one in six of the individuals and families who appeared on the 2024 ranking are missing from this year’s edition, with the compiler warning that the figures lay bare the scale of Britain’s wealth exodus.

Many foreign billionaires who have been living in the UK have… dropped out because they have moved away,” Mr Watts said.

The top of the table holds, but the cracks are widening

Sanjay and Dheeraj Hinduja, the British-Indian brothers behind the Mumbai-headquartered Hinduja Group, kept top spot with a combined fortune of £38bn. The rest of the podium was likewise unchanged, with the famously secretive property magnates David and Simon Reuben and Ukrainian-born industrialist Sir Leonard Blavatnik both still sitting on fortunes north of £25bn.

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The most dramatic faller was Sir James Dyson. The inventor’s eponymous engineering empire was hit hard by Donald Trump’s swingeing tariff regime, and his estimated net worth nearly halved over the year from £20bn to £12bn, enough to send him tumbling from fourth to 13th. It is not the first time Sir James has tangled with policy: he has been one of the most vocal critics of Rachel Reeves’s inheritance tax changes, branding them “spiteful” and warning of the consequences for British family businesses.

City money muscles into the top 10

If old money is having a wobble, the new money minted in the City of London is flexing. Mr Storonsky cracked the top 10 in the same year his fintech juggernaut was finally granted a UK banking licence and clinched a $75bn valuation in a November funding round.

A place behind him in eighth sat Mr Gerko, the cerebral force behind XTX Markets, the quantitative trading shop that has quietly become one of the City’s biggest tax payers. His estimated fortune sits north of £16bn.

Both men were born in Russia, and both have renounced their citizenship in protest at Vladimir Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine — a reminder that the City’s talent pool is global, and mobile.

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A tale of two exoduses

The list’s real story, however, is in the gaps.

For the first two decades of this century, Britain’s super-rich enjoyed a near-uninterrupted bull run. Rich List wealth grew by close to 600 per cent between 2000 and 2022, according to The Sunday Times. That run is now over. The number of sterling billionaires in the UK peaked at 177 in 2022; this year’s tally of 157 was barely up on 2025.

Under the survey’s rules, foreign-born residents who leave automatically fall out of the rankings, while British citizens who emigrate remain. Both groups are now visibly thinning. Mr Watts said he had seen a “sharp rise in the number of British nationals now resident in Dubai, Switzerland and Monaco”, warning the “twin exoduses” represented a worrying development for the British economy and the public finances.

His unease is echoed by international data. The Henley Private Wealth Migration Report has the United Kingdom haemorrhaging high-net-worth residents at a faster clip than any other major economy, with the UAE, Italy and Switzerland the biggest beneficiaries.

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“Will more of the wealthy now set up or grow their ventures overseas and in doing so create fewer jobs here?” Mr Watts asked. “How much tax – if any – will Rachel Reeves’ Treasury be able to extract from those affluent Brits who have now left the country?”

The Reeves effect

Critics increasingly point the finger at Whitehall. The Chancellor has been accused of accelerating departures with a string of measures aimed at ultra-high-net-worth residents and their assets.

In her first Budget in October 2024, Ms Reeves pressed ahead with the abolition of the non-domicile tax regime, slapped VAT on private school fees, raised capital gains tax and tightened several inheritance tax carve-outs. Her 2025 intervention added a so-called mansion tax on properties worth more than £2m and further narrowed the inheritance tax net.

Advisers say the cumulative effect has been a stampede. Research from consultancy Chamberlain Walker, cited by Business Matters, suggests around 1,800 non-doms left Britain in the months after April’s tax changes — 50 per cent more than the Treasury had pencilled in.

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The casualties include some of the City’s biggest names: former Goldman Sachs International chief Richard Gnodde and steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal, both long-standing Rich List fixtures, have moved on. Only one billionaire is recorded as having moved the other way in the past year — the new US ambassador to the Court of St James’s, Warren Stephens.

What it means for SME Britain

For the small and medium-sized businesses that read this magazine, the implications run deeper than schadenfreude over a few moving vans full of Old Master paintings.

Wealthy entrepreneurs are typically the angel investors, family-office backers and growth-stage cheque writers that smaller firms rely on when banks turn cautious. If they decamp to Dubai or Lugano, that capital tends to follow them. The same goes for the philanthropic giving, board memberships and mentoring that often anchor a city’s business community.

The harder question for the Chancellor, and for the firms that depend on a healthy ecosystem of British-based capital, is whether the additional tax raised from those who stay can outweigh the receipts and investment lost from those who leave. On the evidence of this year’s Rich List, that calculation is starting to look uncomfortable.

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Gold loan giant Muthoot FinCorp plans Rs 4,000 crore IPO. Check details

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Gold loan giant Muthoot FinCorp plans Rs 4,000 crore IPO. Check details
Muthoot FinCorp has approved plans to raise up to Rs 4,000 crore through an IPO as the gold loan-focused lender looks to capitalise on strong growth in the organised lending market. The proposed IPO will consist of a fresh issue of equity shares with a face value of Rs 10 each, subject to regulatory approvals and market conditions.

CEO Shaji Varghese said the company may dilute at least 10% stake to comply with listing requirements, while any further dilution would depend on valuation and market response. He added that the valuation discovery process has not yet begun as the company is still in the process of appointing investment bankers for the issue.

Varghese said the IPO is aimed at strengthening capital for future expansion rather than providing an exit to promoters or investors. Unlike several recent financial services IPO candidates, Muthoot FinCorp does not have private equity investors. The company remains fully owned by the promoter family.

“The idea is to raise growth capital for expansion,” Varghese said, adding that the lender wants to move ahead with the listing process at the earliest possible opportunity once approvals and appointments are completed.

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The proposed public issue comes at a time when gold loan companies are witnessing strong business momentum driven by rising gold prices, stable regulations and increasing formalisation of the lending market. Varghese said organised lenders still account for only around 35-40% of the overall gold loan market, while a large portion continues to remain with local financiers, pawn brokers and jewellers.


That, according to the company, leaves significant room for growth for regulated players.
Apart from its traditional gold loan business, Muthoot FinCorp has also been expanding into MSME lending, loan against property and digital financial services through its Muthoot FinCorp One platform.Alongside the IPO approval, the company’s board also cleared multiple capital-raising measures. It approved a stock split under which every equity share with a face value of Rs 10 will be split into five shares of Rs 2 each. The company said the move is aimed at improving liquidity and increasing retail investor participation.

The board further approved raising up to Rs 4,000 crore through public issuance of non-convertible debentures between July 2026 and June 2027. An additional Rs 4,000 crore can also be raised through private placement of debentures and subordinated debt instruments.

The company also approved the issuance of commercial papers with an overall limit of Rs 30,000 crore, subject to a maximum outstanding limit of Rs 10,000 crore at any point in time.

On the financial front, Muthoot FinCorp reported assets under management of Rs 56,185 crore as of March 2026. Standalone revenue for FY26 stood at Rs 8,364 crore, while profit after tax came in at Rs 1,640 crore.

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Also read: Bharti Airtel claims No.2 spot: How it beat HDFC Bank to become India’s second most valuable company

The company reported particularly strong growth in the March quarter. Consolidated profit after tax rose 204% year-on-year to Rs 664 crore in Q4 FY26, while quarterly revenue increased 32% to Rs 3,356 crore.

The IPO plan comes amid increasing investor interest in gold loan companies as elevated gold prices improve collateral values and support lending growth across the sector.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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Guggenheim initiates Yesway stock with buy rating on growth outlook

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Thailand slashes GDP forecast as 3.78tn baht budget pushes debt toward ceiling

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Thailand slashes GDP forecast as 3.78tn baht budget pushes debt toward ceiling

Thailand’s public debt nears 70% of GDP by 2027. A significant portion of obligations mature that year, forcing reliance on refinancing. The government plans to reallocate unspent funds to support vulnerable groups, promote clean energy, and invest in human capital and AI skills.


Key Points

  • Thailand’s public debt is projected to reach 69.36% of GDP by fiscal 2027, necessitating reliance on refinancing due to a large debt-servicing burden.
  • The government plans to reclaim unspent funds (70-100 billion baht) from fiscal 2026 projects and utilize central funds (25 billion baht) to create a fiscal buffer of up to 125 billion baht.
  • This buffer will fund support for vulnerable groups, accelerate economic transition towards renewable energy, and invest in human capital and AI-related skills

Projected Debt and Fiscal Constraints

Thailand’s public debt is a significant concern, with projections indicating it will reach 13.79 trillion baht by the end of fiscal 2027. This figure represents 69.36% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), positioning it just below the statutory ceiling of 70%. Concurrently, the nation faces a substantial debt-servicing obligation, with approximately 1.45 trillion baht in principal maturing in 2027, escalating to 1.81 trillion baht when interest payments are factored in. To manage this, the government has earmarked only a modest 4% of the total budget (around 151 billion baht) for principal repayment, necessitating a strong reliance on refinancing strategies to manage its financial obligations.

Strategic Financial Management and Borrowing Capacity

The government has a limited borrowing capacity of approximately 4% of GDP, equating to roughly 800 billion baht, under the existing debt ceiling framework, as stated by Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Ekniti Nitithanprapas. He further noted that the ceiling, determined by the fiscal policy committee, can be adjusted if circumstances require, referencing precedent from the Covid-19 crisis. Prior to exploring additional borrowing, the administration is prioritizing the efficient reallocation of existing funds. This approach includes plans to reclaim unspent budget allocations from fiscal 2026 projects that fail to secure procurement contracts by April 30th, potentially freeing up 70 billion to 100 billion baht.

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Multi-faceted Fiscal Buffer and Economic Transition Initiatives

The reclaimed funds, combined with 25 billion baht in remaining central funds, are expected to establish a fiscal buffer of up to 125 billion baht. This buffer will be strategically deployed through a three-pronged approach. Targeted support will be provided to vulnerable groups, such as low-income households and transport operators, to mitigate the impact of rising energy costs. Secondly, efforts will focus on accelerating Thailand’s economic transition, particularly by reducing dependence on imported fossil fuels through initiatives like promoting rooftop solar, subsidizing electric vehicles, and introducing a Direct PPA system for clean energy trading. Thirdly, a long-term reform agenda will emphasize investments in human capital and infrastructure, with a particular focus on developing AI-related skills to boost workforce productivity.

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Hindustan Zinc shares crack 7% in two sessions. What’s behind the sharp slide?

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Hindustan Zinc shares crack 7% in two sessions. What’s behind the sharp slide?
Hindustan Zinc shares slipped over 2% to an intraday low of Rs 621.45 on the BSE on Monday, extending losses to more than 7% over the last two trading sessions.

The decline came as silver prices saw a sharp selloff on MCX, falling over Rs 5,000 per kg amid renewed Iran war tensions and reduced expectations of a rate cut this year. Following the government’s import duty hike, MCX silver has now plunged nearly 13%, or around Rs 40,000 per kg, from its peak of Rs 3.04 lakh in just three trading sessions.

A key reason behind the steep correction has been demand destruction at elevated price levels. Unlike gold, silver has a large industrial demand component, with usage spread across sectors such as solar panels, semiconductors, electric vehicles, batteries, electronics, AI infrastructure, and green energy systems.

“At the same time, geopolitical tensions linked to the Iran conflict initially triggered safe-haven buying across precious metals. However, markets later began to focus on the potential impact of prolonged elevated oil prices on global growth momentum. That concern tends to affect industrial metals more heavily than pure defensive assets, causing silver to increasingly trade like an industrial commodity rather than a traditional safe-haven hedge,” the analyst said.

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India, which remains the world’s largest silver importer, could also see weaker domestic demand after the sharp increase in import duty. According to Nirpendra Yadav, Senior Commodity Analyst at Bonanza, the jump in duty to 15% materially raises local prices and may hurt jewellery demand while slowing industrial imports.

Hindustan Zinc Q4 snapshot

The company reported a sharp 68% year-on-year rise in consolidated profit after tax for the March quarter at Rs 5,033 crore, compared with Rs 3,003 crore in the corresponding period last year. Revenue from operations climbed 49% to Rs 13,544 crore from Rs 9,087 crore a year earlier.
EBITDA for the quarter reached a record Rs 7,747 crore, registering a 61% increase year-on-year. EBITDA margin expanded to an industry-leading 57%, reflecting strong operational efficiency and improved profitability.
The company also delivered its strongest-ever quarterly operational performance across several key parameters. Mined metal production touched a record 315 kilotonnes, while refined metal output reached an all-time high of 282 kilotonnes. Hindustan Zinc reported its lowest-ever cost of production at $903 per tonne, improving 9% year-on-year. Silver production stood at 176 tonnes during the quarter, up 11% sequentially.
For the full financial year FY26, mined metal production reached a record 1,114 kilotonnes, while refined metal production came in at 1,048 kilotonnes, the second-highest level ever achieved by the company. Zinc production cost declined to a five-year low of $959 per tonne, improving 9% year-on-year.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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Company vying to replace RAF Red Arrows fighter jet falls into administration

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Some 30 staff at Aeralis have lost their jobs

CGI designs of how the Aeralis aircraft could look

CGI designs of how the Aeralis aircraft could look(Image: Aeralis)

A Bristol aerospace business that was vying to develop a replacement jet for the RAF’s Red Arrows has collapsed into administration, with the loss of 30 jobs.

Aeralis was pinning its hopes on securing a Government contract to replace the Hawk jets, which are due to be retired in 2030 and are currently flown by the famous military aerobatics display team.

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But following a period of financial difficulty, Aeralis was placed into administration on Friday. The company’s board appointed David Buchler and Joanne Milner of London-based Buchler Phillips as joint administrators.

The collapse of the firm follows a sustained period of pressure on the company’s cashflow, Aeralis said. The business blamed “continued delays” to the UK Defence Investment Plan, combined with geopolitical factors affecting sources of funding.

Robin Southwell, chair of AERALIS, said: “The board has taken this decision after careful consideration of the company’s position and the funding challenges it has faced over recent months.

“We will continue to support the joint administrators as they explore viable, sustainable options for the future of the business and engage with interested parties.”

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Aeralis, which was based at Bristol’s Aztec West Business Park, was developing a modular aircraft design for the RAF and had hoped to deliver the first fully British-crewed military jet since the 1970s.

The firm’s modular light jet aircraft platform was intended to support military training, operational support and aerobatic display requirements.

The business had established significant intellectual property, strategic partnerships and advanced digital engineering capabilities during its development programme.

According to the BBC, Barzan Holdings – the investment and procurement arm of Qatar’s Ministry of Defence which was a large investor in the business – had withdrawn funding amid the Iran war.

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It is understood a potential agreement with the French government also failed to materialise, compounding the financial issues.

Aeralis said the administrators would “continue to work closely” with its management and stakeholders to assess strategic options for the business and its assets, including opportunities to secure investment, preserve value and support the continuation of its programme in an alternative structure.

Ms Milner of Buchler Phillips added: “Aeralis has developed a highly differentiated proposition within the aerospace and defence sector.

“We hope that the administration process will provide an opportunity to explore routes to preserve and develop that value for stakeholders.”

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Earnings call transcript: CleanSpark Q2 2026 reveals earnings miss, stock dips

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Earnings call transcript: CleanSpark Q2 2026 reveals earnings miss, stock dips

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Rise in solar panel sales as people 'want to save money'

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Rise in solar panel sales as people 'want to save money'

One director, who has just bought 2,000 panels, hopes to safeguard the company’s future bills.

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Infosys, OFSS, TechM, other IT stocks gain up to 3% despite weak market sentiment. Here’s why

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Infosys, OFSS, TechM, other IT stocks gain up to 3% despite weak market sentiment. Here's why
Tech stocks, including Infosys and Oracle Financial Services Software, gained up to 3% on Monday, lifting the Nifty IT index over 1% even as the broader market remained under pressure.

The Nifty IT index climbed 1.2% to around 28,049, emerging as the only sectoral index trading in the green. Meanwhile, the BSE Sensex and Nifty 50 fell over 1% as the rupee hit a fresh record low and bond yields surged to all-time highs, weighing on investor sentiment.

Today’s Top IT Gainers

Oracle Financial Services Software emerged as the top gainer on the IT pack, rising over 3%. Shares of LTIMindtree, Coforge and Tech Mahindra climbed more than 2% each, while Mphasis and Persistent Systems gained nearly 2% each.

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Heavyweights Infosys and Wipro shares rose over 1% each, while those of Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) and HCL Technologies made marginal gains, as seen at 11.15 am. The sharp gains pulled up the total value of all companies on the Nifty IT index to Rs 1,752 crore.

The AI Story

The IT stocks had seen a sharp decline recently. OpenAI last Monday announced the launch of OpenAI Deployment Company with an initial investment of $4 billion, designed to help organisations build and deploy AI systems they can rely on every day across their most important work. This retriggered worries around AI-led disruption in India’s IT sector.

Strong earnings by tech giants pushed the Nasdaq to record high levels last week, but the Nifty IT index fell. “IT firms are making reasonable headway in AI-driven opportunities, although it will not be enough to compensate for deflationary headwinds. Offsetting growth headwinds amid high competitive intensity will be challenging. Margin headwinds are manageable by further flexing cost levers,” said Kotak Equities.
As global AI giants rallied, IT stocks on Dalal Street plunged. The Nifty IT index has plunged around 12% in one month, with the IT heavyweights hitting fresh 52-week lows last week. However, Nasdaq tumbled more than 1.5% on Friday. On Dalal Street meanwhile, IT stocks jumped.

Rupee At Record Low

The renewed investor optimism may also have been driven by the weakening rupee. Rupee dropped to a fresh all-time low of 96.18 against the US dollar on Monday, eclipsing its previous record of 96.1350. The Indian currency is Asia’s worst performer so far in 2026, and has ‌dropped 5.5% since the Iran-US war erupted on February ⁠28.
Notably, today marks the fifth consecutive session when the Indian rupee hit a fresh record low as high oil prices sent bond yields soaring to record high levels, denting risk appetite and spooking investors. “Market participants remain cautious amid fears that elevated crude prices may persist for a longer duration despite government measures to control volatility. Near-term rupee range is expected between 95.55–96.25,” said Jateen Trivedi, VP Research Analyst – Commodity and Currency, LKP Securities.

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As the IT companies mostly derive their revenue in US dollars, the rupee’s depreciation boosts hopes for better earnings and profitability.

Investors this week will focus squarely on Nvidia’s earnings on Wednesday for clues on the durability of the artificial intelligence-driven rally, said Bajaj Broking.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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Earnings call transcript: iHeartMedia Q1 2026 reveals mixed results with EPS miss

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Why Samsung shares just surged 7% to save Kospi from a tragic market meltdown

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Why Samsung shares just surged 7% to save Kospi from a tragic market meltdown
Shares of Samsung Electronics rose as much as 7% to their day’s high of Korean Won 2,88,500 after the company entered crucial wage negotiations with its largest labour union in an effort to avoid a strike that could disrupt operations at the world’s biggest memory chipmaker.

As a result, the KOSPI gained more than 1%. According to MSCI data, Samsung Electronics carries a weight of 32% in the index, followed by SK Hynix at 22%, making movements in the two stocks highly influential for the benchmark. In the previous session, Samsung shares had slumped more than 8%, dragging the Kospi down 6%.

Concerns over a major disruption to South Korea’s semiconductor industry eased after efforts by political and corporate leaders to calm tensions between the two sides. Adding to the relief, a Korean court on Monday partially approved an injunction against potential illegal actions by the labour union, according to Yonhap News. Samsung shares climbed as much as 6.7% in Seoul, reversing almost all losses of the previous session.

The development gains significance as any production disruption at Samsung could have broad implications for the global technology supply chain. The company is the world’s largest supplier of memory chips used in products ranging from data centre servers and smartphones to electric vehicles.

The negotiations also highlighted growing labour tensions in South Korea as workers seek a larger share of profits generated by companies such as Samsung and SK Hynix amid the global boom in artificial intelligence infrastructure.
Union leaders and company executives resumed government-mediated negotiations on Monday for a second round of talks. The meeting came after days of rising tensions and failed mediation attempts that had raised investor concerns over possible walkouts at Samsung’s semiconductor facilities in Korea. The union has threatened to begin an 18-day strike from May 21 if its demands are not addressed.
Over the weekend, South Korean Prime Minister Kim Min-Seok urged both sides to resolve the dispute through dialogue. Samsung Executive Chairman Jay Y. Lee also made a rare public appeal, referring to union members as “one family.” The company additionally agreed to the union’s request to replace its lead negotiator with the head of the chip division’s people’s team.
“We will sincerely engage in talks,” Samsung union leader Choi Seung-ho said, according to a Bloomberg report.

The union has been pressing Samsung to increase performance-linked compensation after a sharp recovery in semiconductor earnings fueled by strong demand for AI infrastructure. Labour representatives are demanding that Samsung remove the existing cap on bonuses, allocate 15% of operating profit toward employee bonuses and formally include those terms in employment contracts.

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Samsung has proposed allocating 10% of operating profit to bonuses along with a one-time special compensation package that it said exceeds industry standards. Company executives have argued that the union’s demands may not be sustainable over the long term.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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