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Samsung Rides Remote Working, TV Watching-Fuelled Chip and Display Sales to Post Q4 Operating Profit

Analysts expect Samsung to report a jump in memory chip shipments in the December quarter, offsetting lower prices.

Samsung Rides Remote Working, TV Watching-Fuelled Chip and Display Sales to Post Q4 Operating Profit

Samsung likely recorded an estimated 17.5 percent drop in smartphone shipments in the December quarter

Highlights
  • Samsung is world's biggest memory chip supplier and maker of smartphones
  • The company provides only estimates of quarterly revenue
  • Semiconductor exports is expected to rise more than 10 percent in 2021
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Samsung shares jumped on Friday after it said its fourth quarter operating profit likely rose 26 percent as coronavirus pandemic driven remote working and TV-watching fuelled sales of chips and display panels.

Samsung Electronics shares rose as much as 8.6 percent in afternoon trade to a record high, compared to a 3.9 percent rise in the wider market, due to an earlier-than-expected rebound in memory chip prices, analysts said.

"DRAM chip prices appear to be turning around now, rather than later in the year as we expected," said Song Myung-sup, analyst at HI Investment & Securities.

Samsung's shares have risen about 67 percent since September, boosted by a global shortage of chips that has forced firms to scramble to secure production capacity from contract chip manufacturers, or foundries.

The KRW 9 trillion (roughly Rs. 60,400 crores) estimate provided by the South Korean tech giant for profit in the December quarter was in line with a KRW 9.1 trillion (roughly Rs. 61,000 crores) analyst forecast by Refinitiv SmartEstimate despite weaker smartphone sales, marketing costs and a strong won versus US the dollar.

That analyst forecast was trimmed back from KRW 9.5 trillion (roughly Rs. 63,750 crores) earlier in the week.

Samsung, the world's biggest memory chip supplier and maker of smartphones, also said revenue likely rose 1.9 percent to KRW 61 trillion (roughly Rs. 4,09,350 crores).

The company provides only estimates of quarterly revenue and operating profit in its preliminary earnings release. Full earnings are due later this month.

"Work-from-home will become entrenched," said Park Sung-soon, analyst at Cape Investment & Securities. "Samsung's supply comments, and investments in non-memory chips, will be issues to watch out for when full results are announced."

Park said analysts would be closely watching for an update on an earthquake in Taiwan last month that briefly stopped memory chip production at rival DRAM makers. While demand usually rises in response to a supply disruption, researcher TrendForce said the earthquake did not seem to have caused any tangible capacity losses.

Analysts expect Samsung to report a jump in memory chip shipments in the December quarter, compared with the prior quarter, offsetting lower prices.

Those prices will likely rebound in the current quarter, analysts said, as data centre customers return to buying chips, as well as demand from 5G smartphones, notebooks, graphics, and automotive.

South Korea expects semiconductor exports to rise more than 10 percent in 2021, as the pandemic encourages companies to add bandwidth for remote work and consumers to buy devices.

US memory chip peer Micron on Thursday forecast second-quarter revenue above Wall Street estimates.

Smartphone slump

On the flip side, Samsung likely recorded an estimated 17.5 percent drop in smartphone shipments in the December quarter compared to the previous quarter, Counterpoint Research said, due to a high base from brisk sales in the September quarter and competition from Apple's new iPhone 12.

Samsung is expected to unveil its latest flagship smartphone next week. That would be earlier than in past years, a strategy Counterpoint said was likely aimed at filling the vacuum left by Huawei losing market share after US government regulations restricted supplies.

A strong won against the US dollar also dented profits. Samsung makes the bulk of its profits in dollars but reports in won.

© Thomson Reuters 2020


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