The Borneo Post

Samsung to manufactur­e iPhone chips for Apple again, report says

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AFTER five-year hiatus, Samsung Electronic­s will return to manufactur­ing chips for Apple’s new iPhone in 2018, according to a report from the Korea Herald.

The South Korea-based electronic company was a primary producer of iPhone chips until 2013, when Apple awarded its rival Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Company ( TSMC) exclusive production rights.

In 2011, Apple sued Samsung over patent infringeme­nt, and the company cut down the number of components it got from its competitor from that time.

The Herald, which relied on unnamed sources, reported that Samsung’s chances at producing iPhone chips again picked up in June when Kwon Oh-hyun, one of Samsung’s three co- chief executives who is in charge of chips among other things, visited the Apple headquarte­rs in California last month.

Samsung announced in March that it would purchase specialise­d machines,reportedly in an attempt to produce sevennanom­eter processors for the iPhone and regain Apple’s business.

Sources told the Herald that Samsung’s ties to organic light- a emitting diodes, an LED used in phones, is what caused Apple to get Samsung back into the mix for processors. Samsung is the world leader in OLED manufactur­ing, with 95 per cent market share, and will probably be the lone OLED supplier for the upcoming iPhone.

TSMC will still play a role in supplying chips for next year’s iPhones, according to the Herald. It also said Samsung will share some iPhone orders next year that “have been monopolise­d by TSMC.”

It plans to complete its tests on the new chip-making machines in the near future before seeking Apple’s approval.

Samsung had one of its most profitable quarters in company history earlier in the year, with US$ 8.7 billion ( RM39 billion) in operating profit, a 48 per cent increase from the previous year. Total revenue for the quarter was US$ 44.5 billion, with the majority of business coming in semi- conductor and display divisions.

At the time of its announceme­nt, the company also said that demand for chips and memory had increased over the course of the quarter.

Apple and Samsung didn’t respond to requests for comment. — WP-bloomberg

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