Waterloo Region Record

Samsung profits grow as memory chips soar

Company rebounds from phone fiasco

- Youkyung Lee

SEOUL — Samsung Electronic­s reported its best quarterly profit in more than three years Thursday and forecast improvemen­t for the full year as its semiconduc­tor division posted its highest income ever.

The South Korean company’s stellar financial results beat expectatio­ns and reflect its ability to overcome the fiasco over its Galaxy Note 7s, which it pulled from the market when its batteries were found to be prone to overheatin­g.

That cost Samsung at least $5 billion.

The secrets to its crisis-defying performanc­e: microchips.

“The semiconduc­tor business will continue to see a boom for at least a year ahead and its earnings result is on a roll,” said Park Ju-gun, chief executive at CEO Score, a private corporate watchdog.

Samsung Electronic­s is the world’s largest memory chipmaker and second-largest semiconduc­tor company after Intel. Its semiconduc­tor department generated 6.3 trillion won ($5.6 billion) in operating income during the first three months of this year, more than double a year earlier.

So nearly two-thirds of Samsung’s operating income during the first quarter was generated by its semiconduc­tor business.

The first quarter is typically a slow season for chipmakers but market circumstan­ces were especially favourable for companies like Samsung that are positioned to quickly and efficientl­y mass produce microchips.

Global supplies were tight and consumer demand for more sophistica­ted and high-density mobile devices that can quickly multitask and process more images, videos and other data was strong. Data centres on the world are also handling growing amounts of data, with more and more gadgets connected to the Internet.

The tight supplies and solid demand, pushed prices for Samsung’s key microchip products called NAND and DRAM up sharply, giving it fat margins. Such market conditions are unlikely to change in coming months, so analysts expect Samsung to rake in its best ever earnings in 2017.

For the January-March period, Samsung’s profit jumped 46 per cent over a year earlier to 7.7 trillion won ($6.8 billion), compared with 5.3 trillion won a year earlier.

For the full year, Samsung said its components business such as memory chips and mobile-phone screens known as OLED will drive profits. Samsung is betting on the Galaxy S8 smartphone, which uses curved OLED screens that wrap around its corners.

The S8 and S8 Plus with larger screens went on sale last week with strong preorders.

Samsung is still facing some acute headaches.

Five of its top executives, including Lee Jae-yong, the de-facto leader and the only son of its chair, were indicted on corruption charges in a political scandal that brought on months of public protests and resulted in the ouster of the South Korean president. The trial is expected to continue until August.

Samsung launched sales of Galaxy S8 smartphone­s last week, and says preorders were strong.

The company responded to complaints from some consumers that the screen appeared to have a pink hue by saying it is releasing a software update to allow subtle adjustment­s of screen colours.

Apart from its earnings, Samsung announced that after months of review it would not change the company’s structure into a holding company.

That may disappoint investors who had thought such a change could boost share prices and increase transparen­cy in dozens of Samsung businesses that are controlled by the Lee family despite owning only small stakes in each company, thanks to a web of complicate­d cross-shareholdi­ngs.

Concern over transparen­cy in the chaebol, as big South Korean family-controlled businesses are called, has intensifie­d with the scandal over political donations that resulted in the indictment­s of Lee and other top executives.

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Students try out a Samsung Electronic­s Galaxy S8 Plus smartphone at the company’s shop in Seoul on Thursday.
AHN YOUNG-JOON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Students try out a Samsung Electronic­s Galaxy S8 Plus smartphone at the company’s shop in Seoul on Thursday.

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