Samsung Electronics co-CEO Han Jong-Hee dead at 63

Samsung Electronics America Senior Vice President James Fishler unveils the company’s newest products on ‘The Claman Countdown.’
Samsung Electronics co-CEO Han Jong-Hee died Tuesday while being treated for cardiac arrest, the company said.
He was 63.
Newly appointed co-CEO Jun Young Hyun will take over and assume sole responsibility, Samsung said in a regulatory filing. Jun had just been appointed co-CEO last week after leading the company’s semiconductor division.
Han was also the head of the company’s Device eXperience (DX) Division, joined Samsung in 1988, and spent nearly 40 years helping lead Samsung’s TV business. As the head of the DX Division and Digital Appliances Business, he was credited with helping the company grow despite the challenging business environment.
SAMSUNG WEIGHS RELOCATING DRYER PRODUCTION TO US IN RESPONSE TO TRUMP TARIFFS

Han Jong-hee, chief executive officer and head of visual display business at Samsung Electronics Co., died Tuesday. ( Lauren Justice/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)
He started his career at Samsung as the head of product for the research and development team for the visual display business in 2011.
In 2022, he was appointed CEO of one of the world’s largest producers of electronic devices. He was simultaneously responsible for the company’s consumer electronics and mobile devices division.
CHINA’S DEEPSEEK AI STARTUP RELEASES NEW MODEL IN RIVALRY WITH OPENAI

Han Jong-Hee joined Samsung in 1988. (Photo by JUNG YEON-JE/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)
The company specializes in manufacturing a wide variety of consumer and industrial electronics and has two CEOs overseeing the separate divisions.
However, it has been struggling to compete with rivals in the artificial intelligence chip market. It has also been struggling to compete with rival Apple in producing smartphones.
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
At the shareholder meeting Han chaired last week, he told investors that 2025 would be a difficult year, and Samsung would flexibly respond to President Donald Trump’s tariffs with its global supply chain and manufacturing footprints.
He and other executives were grilled by shareholders at the meeting after the company’s failure to ride an AI boom made it one of the worst-performing tech stocks last year.
In semiconductors, Samsung lags behind SK Hynix in so-called high bandwidth memory chips that Nvidia and others rely on for AI graphic processing units.
“First and foremost, I sincerely apologise for the recent stock performance not meeting your expectations. Over the past year, our company failed to adequately respond to the rapidly evolving AI semiconductor market,” Han said.
Reuters contributed to this report.
https://a57.foxnews.com/static.foxbusiness.com/foxbusiness.com/content/uploads/2025/03/0/0/samsung.jpg?ve=1&tl=1
2025-03-25 11:58:43