The Borneo Post

Samsung Electronic­s profit dips as phone sales fall

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SEOUL: Samsung Electronic­s yesterday said its second quarter net profit dipped slightly from a year earlier, with a fall in smartphone sales mitigated by strong demand for its memory chips.

A sluggish market for premium mobile phones and stiff competitio­n contribute­d to a decline in Samsung’s smartphone shipments and revenue compared to the previous quarter, denting demand for its flagship Galaxy device, the South Korean company said.

The world’s biggest maker of memory chips, Samsung has weathered a series of setbacks, including an embarrassi­ng global recall of its Galaxy Note 7 smartphone due to exploding batteries in 2016.

Adding to its troubles, its vicechairm­an Lee Jae-yong, scion of the Samsung group’s founding family, was jailed last year for his part in the sprawling corruption scandal that brought down former president Park Geun-hye.

Lee has since been released after some of his conviction­s were quashed on appeal, and the company has posted record profits in recent quarters, until now.

Net profit for the April to June period came in at 11.04 trillion won (US$9.9 billion), slightly lower than the 11.05 trillion won in the same period in 2017, the company said in a regulatory filing, and missing the 11.6 trillion won average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg News.

While total sales fell 4.1 per cent year-on-year to 58.48 trillion won, the company’s mobile division was particular­ly hard hit, with revenues plunging 22 per cent in the same period.

“Second quarter revenue fell due to softer sales of smartphone­s and display panels,” Samsung said in a statement.

Weak sales of its flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S9, drove down its earnings but robust demand for premium TVs – thanks to soaring interest in the recently concluded 2018 World Cup – and memory chips helped boost the operating profit up nearly six per cent.

Samsung’s chipmaking unit, which dominates the global market after the firm invested tens of billions of dollars to build and expand factories, provides chips for the company’s own devices as well as those manufactur­ed by competitor­s including Apple.

Although its semiconduc­tor business was a bright spot, achieving record high operating profits of 11.6 trillion won, the earnings were lower than expected, with market forecasts averaging 12 trillion won.

“The semiconduc­tor sector fell short of expectatio­ns but its outlook for the second half of this year is rather positive as demand for DRAM chips is solid... Therefore, chip prices are expected to remain strong,” a Samsung official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

Analysts said the semiconduc­tor division would continue its upward trajectory and set new records in coming months.

“Operating profit in the semiconduc­tor sector is likely to hit the largest-ever 13.7 trillion won in the next quarter, due to the high DRAM chip prices and increasing shipments of NAND flash memory products”, said Park Yoo-ak, an analyst with Kiwoom Securities.

Samsung said it expected “growing demand for flexible OLED panels to drive earnings higher in the second half” of the year. — AFP

 ??  ?? Quarterly net profit for Samsung Electronic­s. — AFP graphic
Quarterly net profit for Samsung Electronic­s. — AFP graphic

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