Business World

Samsung plans $18.6-B South Korea investment

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SEOUL — Samsung Electronic­s Co. Ltd said on Tuesday it plans to invest at least 21.4 trillion won ($18.63 billion) in South Korea as it seeks to extend its lead in memory chips and next-generation displays for smartphone­s.

The world’s biggest memory chipmaker by revenue said the spending includes 14.4 trillion won by 2021 on its new NAND factory in Pyeongtaek. It will invest six trillion won in a new semiconduc­tor production line in Hwaseong, but did not elaborate on timing or product.

The firm will also add a production line to its NAND plant in Xi’an, China, in response to booming demand for long-term data storage chips. It has not set an investment amount or time frame.

Samsung and other memory makers are widely expected to post record profit in 2017 as a persistent shortage and demand for more capability in smartphone­s and servers lift prices. Industry sources and analysts said the shortage is more acute for NAND chips due to increasing adoption of high-end storage products.

Some analysts said Samsung’s production technologi­es are at least a year ahead of rivals such as Toshiba Corp. and SK Hynix, Inc. Samsung routinely invests more than $ 10 billion in semiconduc­tors annually, helping build its lead, and analysts said the latest investment seeks to widen the gap.

Samsung, Toshiba and SK Hynix have committed tens of billions of dollars to boost NAND output in recent years, yet analysts and industry sources said shortages are likely to persist at least through 2017 as new facilities will not make meaningful supply contributi­ons until next year.

Some analysts said the additional capacity could cause slight oversupply in early 2018, but that price crashes are unlikely as smartphone makers opt for greater internal storage. Demand for high- end server storage for cloud computing and virtual reality applicatio­ns will also continue to grow.

“I believe NAND market conditions will continue to favor suppliers until 2020,” said HMC Investment analyst Greg Roh. Any oversupply issues will be temporary and limited to seasonally weaker periods, he said.

Samsung’s investment plan comes as new South Korean President Moon Jae-in calls on local businesses to create more jobs and help reinvigora­te the economy.

Samsung said its South Korea investment could create up to 440,000 jobs through 2021 and will help boost the economy.

In China, some South Korean firms have suffered from sales decline or have been forced to scale down operations after retaliator­y measures from Beijing over the deployment of a US anti-missile defense system outside Seoul, but components makers such as Samsung have not yet been affected. Chinese smartphone makers are among the biggest buyers of memory chips and displays, many from Samsung.

The South Korean firm accounted for 40.4% of global memory chip revenue in JanuaryMar­ch, showed data from researcher TrendForce, making it difficult for electronic­s makers to entirely avoid buying its chips.

China is trying to grow its own memory chip producers but it may take several years before Chinese companies can compete with existing makers.

Samsung on Tuesday also said unit Samsung Display plans to invest around one trillion won on a new organic light-emitting diode display complex in South Korea. —

 ??  ?? SIGNAGE is seen at the Samsung 837 store in the Meatpackin­g District of Manhattan, New York, US, October 10, 2016.
SIGNAGE is seen at the Samsung 837 store in the Meatpackin­g District of Manhattan, New York, US, October 10, 2016.

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