Samsung Elec to resume
Galaxy Note 7 sales in South Korea on September 28
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[September 16, 2016]
By Se Young Lee
SEOUL (Reuters) - Samsung Electronics
Co Ltd said on Friday it would resume selling new Galaxy Note 7
smartphones to South Korean customers from Sept. 28, as it rushes to
complete the costly recall and salvage second-half sales for the
device.
Analysts have cut their earnings expectations for the South Korean
tech giant after it announced on Sept. 2 a recall of Note 7
smartphones from 10 markets due to faulty batteries that caused
phones to set on fire. Samsung has received 92 reports of batteries
overheating in the United States alone, including 26 reports of
burns and 55 cases of property damage.
The recall is unprecedented in scale for the world's top smartphone
maker, which prides itself on its manufacturing prowess. It had been
counting on the device - costing 988,900 won ($882) in South Korea -
to compete with Apple Inc's <AAPL.O> new iPhones and to maintain its
smartphone sales in the second half.
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Some analysts say the recall may cost Samsung up to $5 billion in
revenue this year and will damage the company's reputation. Samsung
says it has sold 2.5 million phones with faulty batteries.
A Samsung spokeswoman told Reuters the schedule for restarting sales
for the device elsewhere, including the United States, will depend
on the circumstances for the individual markets. The firm has said
new sales in Australia will resume in early October.
Samsung is pushing to salvage sales during the busy shopping season
in key markets in the fourth quarter.
The firm tapped China's Amperex Technology Limited (ATL) as the main
battery supplier for the Note 7 phones, a person familiar with the
matter told Reuters. A second person told Reuters that Samsung SDI
Co Ltd <006400.KS> made faulty batteries that triggered the recall,
but the company's representatives could not be immediately reached
for comment.
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A Samsung Electronics' Galaxy Note 7 new smartphone is displayed at
its store in Seoul, South Korea, September 2, 2016. REUTERS/Kim
Hong-Ji/File Photo
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Though the initial recall announcement was well received, analysts said
Samsung's brand image was subsequently tarnished as aviation authorities and
airlines began issuing bans or advisories against using or charging the Note 7
on planes.
Samsung formally announced the recall of about 1 million Note 7 devices on
Thursday in cooperation with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC),
but the commission criticized the company for trying to initiate a recall on its
own instead of following proper reporting procedures.
Samsung has said it would resume sales in the affected markets once enough
replacement phones have been issued. It will start issuing replacement devices
in South Korea on Sept. 19, while U.S. replacements will start on Sept. 21.
(Reporting by Se Young Lee; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)
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