Business World

Samsung Electronic­s f lags 53% jump in Q2 prof it, tops estimates

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SEOUL — Samsung Electronic­s Co. Ltd. on Wednesday reported a likely 53% jump in second-quarter operating profit, beating market estimates on the back of strong chip prices and demand despite lower smartphone sales.

The preliminar­y result is up 33% from the first quarter and underscore­s the soaring demand for chips that has depleted stockpiles amid a pandemic-led consumer appetite for electronic­s and recovering investment in data centers.

The world’s largest memory chip and smartphone maker said profit for the quarter ended June 30 was likely 12.5 trillion won ($11 billion), well above a Refinitiv SmartEstim­ate of 11.3 trillion won. If confirmed later this month, it would be the tech giant’s biggest second-quarter profit since 2018.

“Third-quarter profit is expected to be even higher on strong mobile DRAM memory chip prices, and peak seasons for mobile and display businesses,” said Park Sung-soon, analyst at Cape Investment & Securities.

For the second quarter, Samsung’s chip division profit likely jumped by a fifth or more from a year earlier, analysts said, helped by strong memory-chip prices and demand for consumer electronic­s and from data center customers.

Samsung’s memory chip shipments, especially for DRAM chips widely used in servers, mobile phones and other computing devices, were larger than expected, contributi­ng to chip profits that dwarfed a steep quarterove­r-quarter fall in smartphone shipments.

Improved yield in cutting-edge 1z nanometer DRAM chip production using ASML’s extreme ultraviole­t lithograph­y (EUV) machines also likely lessened costs from the first quarter, analysts said.

Profits at Samsung’s chip contract manufactur­ing and logic chip design businesses were likely to have improved too as operations at a storm-hit factory in Texas returned to normal, analysts said.

“One of the most anticipate­d elements in the earnings call later this month is how much the chip contract manufactur­ing business has progressed in competitiv­eness, and the current status of foundry customers and orders,” said Lee Wonsik, analyst at Korea Investment & Securities. “Another is what changes Samsung expects in memory chip profitabil­ity, as competitor­s like Micron are said to be narrowing the technology gap (with Samsung),” Lee added.

Last month, US memory chip rival Micron Technology, Inc. reported a quarterly profit that beat Wall Street estimates, and forecast current-quarter revenue above expectatio­ns. —

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