Chips drive highest Samsung Q2 profit since 2018, but demand cooling
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[July 07, 2022] By
Joyce Lee and Heekyong Yang
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea's Samsung
Electronics Co Ltd turned in its best April-June profit since 2018 on
Thursday, underpinned by strong sales of memory chips to server
customers even as demand from inflation-hit smartphone makers cools.
Shares of the world's largest memory-chip and smartphone maker closed up
3.2% after preliminary results were announced, versus a 1.8% rise in the
wider market.
Shares of other chipmakers, including rival SK Hynix and the world's
biggest foundry TSMC, also rose as analysts said tight supply of certain
chips could help offset slower demand that is driving down memory chip
prices.
Samsung posted an operating profit of 14 trillion won ($10.7 billion),
up 11% from 12.57 trillion won a year earlier, just shy of a 14.45
trillion won SmartEstimate from Refinitiv.
Revenue for the second quarter rose 21% to 77 trillion won, in line with
market estimates.
The strong quarter for Samsung comes at a time when other chipmakers
have warned of a looming chip glut at customers who stocked up during
the pandemic to meet higher demand from people working from home.
Chipmakers including Micron and Advanced Micro Devices have also
recently signalled waning demand as red-hot inflation squeezes spending.
"Memory chipmakers are expected to build inventory this year, keeping
supply conservative, and hike shipments when prices rebound and demand
recovers next year", said Park Sung-soon, an analyst at Cape Investment
& Securities.
Prices of specific DRAM chips, used in devices and servers, fell about
12% last month from a year ago, according to data provider TrendForce.
Prices of NAND Flash chips, used for data storage, are also projected to
fall as much as 5% in the July-September period from the previous
quarter.
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The logo of Samsung Electronics is seen at its office building in
Seoul, South Korea, March 23, 2018. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
SMARTPHONE DEMAND WEAKENS
Rising inflation, concerns about a downturn in major markets, the war in Ukraine
and China's COVID-19 lockdowns have resulted in slowing smartphone sales,
leaving server chip demand as the only bright spot, analysts said.
Samsung's profits have been shielded as large U.S. tech firms such as Amazon,
Microsoft, Alphabet's Google and Meta that use a lot of data centre services
kept buying chips to meet cloud demand, they added.
Making a case for strong server demand, Taiwanese contract electronics supplier
and Apple iPhone maker Foxconn on Monday raised its full-year outlook and said
it was optimistic about the third quarter.
A strong dollar, which hit a 20-year high, may have also aided Samsung's chip
profits in the second quarter.
Samsung's chip sales are made mainly in dollars, while it reports its profit in
Korean won, so a firm greenback translates to higher chip earnings.
Estimated smartphone shipments by Samsung's mobile business in the second
quarter were about 62-64 million, about 5%-8% lower than a March estimate,
Counterpoint Research said, as inflation hit smartphone demand.
Samsung shipped 74 million smartphones in the first quarter.
"This trend is the same for major global smartphone makers, although there is
variance to some degree ... In particular, the hit to the demand for low- and
mid-end smartphones seems more severe," said Jene Park, Senior analyst at
Counterpoint.
($1 = 1,304.4400 won)
(Reporting by Joyce Lee and Heekyong Yang; Editing by Sayantani Ghosh and Himani
Sarkar)
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