• Tuesday, April 23, 2024
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Samsung laments drop in chip prices will hit Q1 earnings

Samsung Electronics

Samsung Electronics said its first-quarter profit would likely miss market expectations due to falls in chip prices and slowing demand for display panels, in an unprecedented statement ahead of its earnings guidance.

The announcement came after the Apple supplier and rival told shareholders last week that slack global economic growth and softer demand for memory chips, its core business, would weigh on operations in 2019.

According to Samsung in a regulatory filing pre-empting its earnings guidance “The Company expects the scope of price declines in main memory chip products to be larger than expected,”

Samsung did not elaborate on the purpose of its filing. A company official confirmed the global leader in smartphones, televisions and computer chips had not previously provided comment before its official earnings estimate.

The firm was forecast to post a KRW 7.2 trillion (N 23trillion) operating profit for the January-March period, according to Refinitiv SmartEstimate, more than 50 percent below the KRW 15.6 trillion recorded in the same period a year ago.

Its sales were expected to fall to KRW 53.7 trillion (N17 trillion) from KRW 60.6 trillion (N19 trillion) a year ago, Refinitiv shows.

Lee Won-sik, an analyst at Shinyoung Securities said “Inventories piling up on its memory chip side and the weak performance of its display panels business due to bad sales of Apple’s iPhones are hurting profitability for Samsung,” said DRAM chip prices fell more than 20 percent on average in the first quarter, according to DRAMeXchange, a unit of Trendforce that traces memory chip prices.

Daiwa Securities forecast Samsung’s display panel division to swing to an operating loss of KRW 620 billion (N196 billion) in the first quarter, while the semiconductor business’s operating profit would shrink.

Uncertainties over US-China trade tensions and China’s sluggish economy are clouding the outlook for global electronics makers, analysts say.

Chipmakers in particular have been hit hard by a glut in the global semiconductor industry triggered by weakening smartphone sales and falling investment from data centre companies.

Samsung told shareholders at its annual general meeting last week that sales of memory products would likely revive in the second half of the year after a tough first half.

Investors also took heart when US chipmaker Micron Technology forecast a recovery in the memory chip market around the middle of the year.

Daiwa Securities on Tuesday reaffirmed a buy rating on Samsung, saying it expected demand for memory chips and organic light-emitting diode (OLED) panels to improve from the second half of 2019.

Samsung Electronics shares were down 0.2 percent while the broader market was 0.3 percent higher.

According to Park Jung-hoon, a fund manager at HDC Asset Management that owns Samsung Elec shares.”Samsung is giving a signal to the market so that investors can be prepared and there will be no surprise when Samsung posts its first-quarter earnings guidance next week,”

“Its shares are not reacting a lot, though, as concerns over its first quarter have been reflected

 

Jonathan Aderoju