Daily Dispatch

Samsung shares dive on Apple rumour

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SHARES in Samsung Electronic­s Co slumped more than 6% yesterday, wiping $10-billion (R83.5-billion) off the electronic­s giant’s market value, on a report that Apple placed huge chip orders with troubled Japanese chip rival Elpida.

Taiwan’s Digitimes, an online trade news site, reported that Apple recently placed large mobile dynamic random access memory (Dram) orders with Elpida’s 12-inch plant in Hiroshima, Japan, securing around half the facility’s total chip production. It cited unnamed industry sources in its report, which hit shares of major chip suppliers to Apple.

SK Hynix shares closed almost 9% lower at a 20-week low – the biggest one-day drop in nine months.

Samsung, the world’s biggest Dram maker, tumbled 6.2% to a 9-week low of 1.23-million won (R9 184) – the stock’s biggest daily fall in nearly four years.

“It looks like Apple doesn’t want to see Samsung and Hynix dominate the chip market. Apple wants to maintain its bargaining power by keeping Elpida running,” said Choi Do-yeon, an analyst at LIG Investment & Securities.

Us-based Micron Technology Corp is in talks to acquire Elpida’s business as the Japanese firm tries to restructur­e after tough market conditions and global competitio­n drove it into bankruptcy protection.

“A merged Micron-elpida could pose a significan­t threat to South Korean memory chipmakers, and Elpida’s huge order from Apple was the spark that triggered these worries,” said Lim Dol-yi, an analyst at Solomon Investment & Securities.

Samsung declined to comment,

as did

the Japanese court-appointed Elpida’s rehabilita­tion.

A spokeswoma­n for SK Hynix said: “We are receiving more orders for mobile Dram chips from our customers.”

Technology shares were also impacted by a broader sell-off after talks to form a new Greek government failed, stoking concerns the country may exit the eurozone and increase financial market uncertaint­y. Shares in flatscreen maker LG Display slid 4.5%.

“Samsung shares were already facing pressure since offshore investors began cutting back on risk during the latest streak of selloffs, but the news surroundin­g Elpida was the straw that broke the camel’s back,” said Rhoo Yong-suk, an analyst at Hyundai Securities. “It was just unfortunat­e timing that coincided with jitters surroundin­g Greece.” — Reuters

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