Shinhan Bank has initiated a sale of Samsung Electronics stock valued at roughly $2.1 billion, according to a term sheet reviewed on Wednesday. The document shows the bank is offering 15 million shares of Samsung Electronics, with an indicated price band from 204,395 won to 208,605 won per share.
The prices in the term sheet are below the stock's Wednesday closing price of 210,500 won, representing a discount in the range of 0.9% to 2.9% relative to that close. The shares being marketed account for about 0.25% of Samsung Electronics' shares outstanding, as stated in the term sheet.
Market context in the immediate period before the offering showed Samsung Electronics shares finishing the trading day up 7.1% on Wednesday. The rise was attributed in market commentary to a relief rally following reports of a ceasefire in the Middle East, which market participants linked to reduced geopolitical risk in the short term.
Attempts to obtain comment were unsuccessful. A spokesperson for Samsung Electronics could not be reached immediately, and Shinhan Bank was not reachable outside normal business hours, according to the information associated with the term sheet.
Details at a glance
- Offeror: Shinhan Bank
- Company: Samsung Electronics
- Number of shares offered: 15 million
- Indicated price range: 204,395 won to 208,605 won per share
- Discount to Wednesday close (210,500 won): 0.9% to 2.9%
- Value of offering: about $2.1 billion
- Share of outstanding stock: ~0.25%
- Latest trading note: shares closed up 7.1% on Wednesday amid a relief rally tied to reports of a ceasefire in the Middle East
The term sheet is the primary source for the transaction details cited above. The document provides the numeric parameters for the proposed share sale but does not include additional commentary from either Shinhan Bank or Samsung Electronics.
Given the information available, market observers and stakeholders may monitor how the offering is received at the indicated price band and whether the sale proceeds at or within that range. The documents also indicate the practical limitation that neither company had provided immediate public comment on the transaction at the time the term sheet was reviewed.