China Daily

Samsung profit tops estimates on S7

- By BLOOMBERG

Samsung Electronic­s Co reported second-quarter profit that beat analysts’ estimates, fueled by stronger sales of Galaxy S7 smartphone­s and aggressive cost cuts.

Net income, excluding minority interests, was 5.83 trillion won ($5.1 billion) in the period, the Suwon, South Korea-based company said in a filing on Thursday.

That compared with the 5.64 trillion won average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The company also announced a 1.79 trillion won share buyback, the final stage of a plan announced last year.

Samsung has benefited from sluggish sales of iPhones as US wireless carriers promoted the Galaxy S7 for high-end consumers, helping reduce marketing expenses. That could change in the second half as the company faces new models from Apple Inc.

Lower prices for semiconduc­tors and displays have also helped sales of the company’s other consumer electronic­s.

“The smartphone and TV divisions led the earnings surprise for the quarter,” said Greg Roh, an analyst at HMC Investment Securities in Seoul.

“Samsung did well in the first half, but it’s a matter of how well it could defend itself from the overall downside risks in the second half.”

Shares of Samsung fell 1.3 percent to 1,507,000 won at the close of trade. The stock has gained 20 percent this year after three straight annual declines.

“We will be implementi­ng very active marketing activities in the second half to drive up actual purchases and through this, we plan to continue to maintain overall sales of our premium handsets,” Lee Kyeong-tae, vice-president of the mobile communicat­ions business, told a conference call.

Samsung will unveil its next-generation Note device with larger displays on Aug 2 in New York, Brazil and in

Greg Roh, an analyst at HMC Investment Securities in Seou

London, the company said. While the company is finalizing its capital spending plans, it expects a slight increase from the year earlier.

Revenue was 50.9 trillion won in the second quarter, slightly higher than the 50 trillion won of its July 7 preliminar­y earnings announceme­nt.

Samsung’s earnings came the same day that June quarter data on the global market were released, showing the fastest growth coming from Chinese vendors. Samsung maintained its global leadership and shipped 3.4 percent more smartphone­s, while those at fourth-ranked Oppo Electronic­s Corp more than doubled and fifthplace­d vivo Mobile Communicat­ion Technology Co Ltd jumped 62 percent, according to data from Counterpoi­nt Research.

Research company Canalys said the worldwide smartphone market grew modestly in the second quarter after a disappoint­ing first quarter.

Global shipments reached over 330 million units, with Samsung leading the market with shipments around 80 million units.

It said Apple shipped 40 million iPhones in the quarter, a second consecutiv­e annual decline in shipments. In third place, Huawei Technologi­es Co’s shipments increased to 31 million on the back of record shipments in China and continued growth in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

The smartphone and TV divisions led the earnings surprise for the quarter.”

 ??  ?? Visitors test Samsung Galaxy S7 edge smartphone­s at its showroom in Seoul.
Visitors test Samsung Galaxy S7 edge smartphone­s at its showroom in Seoul.

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