The new automotive component team will "focus on building its competencies in infotainment and autonomous driving vehicles", the South Korean electronics giant said in its annual business reorganisation plan announced yesterday.
The new unit will be headed by the firm's executive vice president Park Jong-Hwan who formerly supervised motor and compressor production for Samsung's home appliances.
Park will coordinate participation by affiliates such as battery maker Samsung SDI and software services provider Samsung SDS.
Samsung Electronics -- the South's largest firm by value -- closed two per cent higher on Seoul's main stock market.
LG -- another South Korean electronics giant that has developed components for smart cars since 2013 -- lost 6.2 per cent on concerns over intensifying competition.
Samsung -- the world's top maker of smartphones as well as mobile phones -- is also producing semiconductors, displays and home appliances including washing machines and TVs.
Yesterday's announcement marked the firm's first foray into the car business since 1995 when it established Samsung Motors. The unit was sold to French carmaker Renault in 1999 as Samsung struggled in the wake of the 1997-98 Asian currency crisis.
Other global electronics firms such as LG, Apple and Panasonic are also eyeing the lucrative market for next-generation vehicles mounted with electronic sensors, displays and Internet connection.
Apple reportedly aims to have an electric car on the road in 2019 while Google and several major carmakers have also been pursuing autonomous vehicle technology.
The Internet-enabled, next-generation cars are expected to use a wide range of semiconductor components, allowing Samsung room for new growth, he added.
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