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		Samsung mobile recovery suffers blow as 
		Galaxy Notes 'catch fire' 
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		 [September 01, 2016] 
		By Se Young Lee 
 SEOUL (Reuters) - The recovery in Samsung 
		Electronics Co Ltd's <005930.KS> mobile business suffered a blow on 
		Thursday as reports of exploding batteries forced the firm to delay 
		shipments of Galaxy Note 7 smartphones, and knocked $7 billion off its 
		market value.
 
 Investors drove the stock to two-week lows after the global smartphone 
		leader told Reuters late on Wednesday the shipments had been delayed for 
		quality control testing, and that shipments to South Korea's top three 
		mobile carriers had been halted.
 
 Faults with the new premium flagship device could deal a major blow to 
		the South Korean giant, which was counting on the Galaxy Note 7 to 
		maintain its strong mobile earnings momentum against Apple Inc's 
		<AAPL.O> new iPhones expected to be unveiled next week.
 
 "This is some major buzz-kill for Samsung, especially given all of the 
		hard-earned excitement that products like the Note 7 have been garnering 
		lately," IDC analyst Bryan Ma said.
 
 "The pending Apple launch puts all the more pressure for them to contain 
		this quickly. The timing of this couldn’t have been worse."
 
 Samsung did not comment on what problem it was trying to address or 
		whether other markets were affected besides South Korea.
 
		
		 
		Sister company Samsung SDI Co Ltd <006400.KS> said that while it was a 
		supplier of Galaxy Note 7 batteries, it had received no information to 
		suggest the batteries were faulty.
 Several people posted images and videos of charred Galaxy Note 7s online 
		and said their phones had caught on fire.
 
 "Be careful out there, everyone rocking the new Note 7, might catch fire 
		y'all," one user said in a YouTube clip showing a burnt Note phone. It 
		was not immediately possible to confirm the veracity of the clip.
 
 Samsung's shares, which hit a record high of 1.694 million won last 
		week, fell 2 percent, and Samsung SDI tumbled 6.1 percent, versus a 0.1 
		percent fall for the broader market <.KS11>.
 
 Several South Korean media reports, without citing direct sources, said 
		Samsung will soon announce a plan to recall affected Note 7 phones and 
		replace their batteries as opposed to giving the users a new device. A 
		Samsung spokesman declined to comment on the reports.
 
		DAMAGE CONTROL
 Last year, production problems for the curved displays for the Galaxy S6 
		edge model resulted in disappointing sales, and Samsung risks a repeat 
		this year if it cannot address the Galaxy Note 7 problems quickly.
 
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			A model demonstrates iris recognition function of Galaxy Note 7 new 
			smartphone during its launching ceremony in Seoul, South Korea, 
			August 11, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo 
            
             
			Its mobile profit is on track to post annual growth for the first 
			time in three years, thanks to robust sales of the Galaxy S7 and S7 
			edge devices that it launched in March to critical acclaim.
 The Galaxy Note 7 received similar praise, raising expectations for 
			strong sales in the second half. Samsung said in August demand for 
			the new handset, priced at 988,900 won ($882) in South Korea, was 
			far exceeding supply, pushing the firm to delay the launch in some 
			markets.
 
 HDC Asset Management fund manager Park Jung-hoon said it now 
			appeared inevitable that Samsung's smartphone average selling price 
			and profits would miss lofty second-half expectations.
 
 "Apple is supposed to show off the iPhone 7 next week and this issue 
			has emerged, so the current state of things do not look good," he 
			said.
 
 Though a components pick-up will buttress overall profits, Park said 
			mobile operating profit might decline by up to 200 billion won for 
			July-September.
 
 The mobile division accounted for about 54 percent of Samsung 
			Electronics' January-June operating profit of 14.8 trillion won.
 
 Hyundai Securities said in a report that the Galaxy Note 7's 
			problems should be resolved within a "few weeks".
 
 The brokerage retained its third-quarter operating profit forecast 
			of 8.5 trillion won.
 
 (Reporting by Se Young Lee; Editing by Stephen Coates and Simon 
			Cameron-Moore)
 
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