Strong smartphone sales raise hopes of Samsung turnaround
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[October 08, 2019] By
Heekyong Yang and Ju-min Park
SEOUL (Reuters) - Strong sales of Samsung
Electronics' Galaxy Note 10 smartphone series are limiting forecast
profit falls at the South Korean tech giant, raising hopes it is getting
back on a growth track after years of moribund sales.
Samsung, the world's largest smartphone maker, is powering ahead with
the launch of 5G phones and $2,000 foldable handsets as it heats up
competition with rivals U.S. Apple and China's Huawei [HWT.UL] following
a battery explosion scandal in 2017 that hurt sales.
Analysts said the strategy may be paying off as the company on Tuesday
flagged a smaller-than-expected fall in third quarter operating profit,
saying at the same time that sales of the Note 10 both at home and in
Europe had been strong since the Aug. 23 launch.
There are also early signs that the global memory chip business, a key
driver of Samsung's profit, will stabilize next year after prices were
eroded by a weak global economy and slower spending by key data center
customers.
"With its foldable smartphone that no other competitors have yet
launched, Samsung will likely lead the high-end smartphone market as it
would mass produce foldable smartphones next year," said Song Myung-sup,
an analyst at HI Investment & Securities.
"Also, a growing number of data center customers are ordering more
memory chips ... possibly slowing down the drop in prices," Song added.
Samsung said it has sold more than one million of the 5G Note 10
handsets in South Korea, making it the company's fastest selling
flagship model at home, and sales in Europe were also strong.
Analysts credit Samsung with receiving a boost from U.S. sanctions on
Huawei that effectively bar U.S. firms from supplying the Chinese
competitor.
Huawei's new high-end Mate 30 smartphones are being shipped to Europe
this month, but the sanctions mean the product lacks access to a
licensed version of U.S. Google’s Android operating system, as well as
mobile services that include its Play Store and popular apps like Gmail,
Youtube or Maps.
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The logo of Samsung
Electronics is seen at its office building in Seoul, South Korea,
July 4, 2017. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo
Jene Park, a senior analyst at market tracker Counterpoint Research, said
Samsung was also moving in on Huawei at the lower end of the market in Europe
and Latin America.
Sales of Huawei's Honor smartphones, which are mainly in the $180-$249 price
band and accounted for a large portion of sales outside of China, had dropped
significantly since March, allowing Samsung to boost sales volumes of its new A
series, according to Counterpoint.
CHIP RECOVERY?
But Huawei's woes also present problems for Samsung as the as the world's
biggest semiconductor firm by revenue, with the Chinese firm a major buyer of
its memory chips.
Some analysts are more cautious about the outlook for the global memory chip
business, which remains clouded by U.S.-Sino trade conflict and provides two
thirds of Samsung's profit.
Samsung's profit has been slumping every quarter since the year-end holiday
quarter last year and is expected to fall again in the current quarter
year-on-year.
In a limited trading update ahead of full earnings later this month, Samsung on
Tuesday said operating profit for the July to September quarter would likely
tumble 56% to 7.7 trillion won ($6.44 billion), slightly better than the 7.1
trillion won forecast by Refinitiv SmartEstimate. It also flagged a revenue fall
of 5.3% to 62 trillion won.
"The strong smartphone sales has limited ability to fix all Samsung's issues,"
said Park Sung-soon, an analyst at Cape Investment & Securities. "Data center
customers, a major driver for memory chip business, are pursuing conservative
investment for the time being, not particularly uplifting news for Samsung."
Shares in Samsung were up about 1.5%, just slightly ahead of an 0.8% rise in the
wider market in afternoon trade.
(Reporting by Ju-min Park and Heekyong Yang; Editing by Jane Wardell)
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