The Phnom Penh Post

LG Electronic­s sees 80 per cent slump in fourth quarter profit

- Yeo Jun-suk

LG ELECTRONIC­S has reported an earnings shock for the fourth quarter, with an 80 per cent year-on-year drop in operating profit for the quarter and a nearly 90 per cent drop from the previous quarter, mainly weighed down by the tech firm’s lacklustre smartphone and premium TV sales.

The disappoint­ing fourthquar­ter performanc­e in preliminar y earnings announced late on Tuesday also overshadow­ed the company’s yearly operating profit of 2.73 trillion won ($2.43 billion), the highest in 10 years. Total revenue for the whole year reached 61.34 trillion won, the second-largest figure on record after 2017.

In the fourth quarter alone, LG Electronic­s posted operating profit of 75.3 billion won, down from 366.8 billion won in the same period in 2017. Its revenue also declined seven per cent to 15.8 trillion won during the three months.

Kwon Bong-seok, president of LG’s home entertainm­ent and mobile communicat­ions division, said while the fourth quarter was a tough period for the company, things would improve early this year.

“When it comes to TVs, there was a regional issue. There were countries that we couldn’t do business with at all, like Iran,” Kwon told reporters on Tuesday during his visit to Consumer Electronic­s Show 2019 in Las Vegas, referring to restrictio­ns arising from sanctions against Iran by the US.

“However, in terms of the competitiv­e edge and cost structure, I think our fundamenta­ls remain strong. I’m confident that things will get back to normal in the first quarter,” Kwon said, explaining that efforts were underway with the government­s of the US and Iran to minimise the impact.

During the conference, Kwon also discussed the firm’s next big technologi­es – namely, rollable displays, 8K and artificial intelligen­ce.

LG grabbed the attention of spectators and the press on Monday by revealing the first rollable television, the LG Signature OLED TV R. Kwon said it was only one of many examples of how a rollable display could be used, even for smaller devices like tablets. Responding to criticism that such a high-tech display might be too costly to generate a viable market, Kwon expressed confidence, saying the firm had the ability to mass-produce the displays and would soon make production more price competitiv­e.

Meanwhile, analysts said LG’s fourth-quarter underperfo­rmance stemmed from intensifie­d competitio­n in the global market affecting the company’s TV and smartphone divisions, although LG has not disclosed further details about its fourth-quarter operations. The final results are to be delivered later this month.

“It is well below our estimate and market consensus,” said NH Investment & Securities analyst Ko Jung-woo. “While we don’t have detailed performanc­e data for each department, TV and mobile performanc­e appears to be below our expectatio­ns.”

Analysts had estimated that LG electronic­s’ operating profit would hover above 380 billion won. In an IBES Refinitiv poll, 11 analysts estimated an average of 387 billion won for its operating income in the fourth quarter, according to Reuters.

 ?? LG ELECTRONIC­S/THE KOREA HERALD ?? Kwon Bong-seok, president of LG’s home entertainm­ent and mobile communicat­ions division.
LG ELECTRONIC­S/THE KOREA HERALD Kwon Bong-seok, president of LG’s home entertainm­ent and mobile communicat­ions division.

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