Galaxy drives Samsung record profit

People try out the Galaxy Tab 10.1 displayed in a store at the headquarters of Samsung Electronics in Seoul. Picture: Reuters

Saturday, July 7, 2012

SOARING sales of the Galaxy smartphone drove record quarterly profit of US$5.9 billion at Samsung Electronics, though the South Korean tech giant is sweating over how Europe's debt crisis is denting demand in its biggest market for televisions and home appliances.

The flagship Galaxy smartphones are likely to have stretched their lead over rivals Apple and Nokia despite a parts shortage that meant it struggled to keep up with stronger-than-expected demand for its latest S III model.

While strong handset sales grab the headlines, more than doubling profit growth, other businesses such as chips and consumer electronics are battling weak prices and demand and a limp euro, which eats away at repatriated profits. In a sign that the eurozone crisis is exercising minds in boardrooms around the globe, Samsung executives said this week the group was operating to a contingency plan.

"Europe is our biggest consumer electronics market and we may have to initiate cost cuts and product price increases should the euro fall further from the current level," said one executive who didn't want to be named as the plan is internal.

"Our smartphones are flying off the shelves, with some outlets reporting 40-60 per cent sales growth, but that's distorting the overall trading outlook which is more challenging due to the weak global economy and a weak euro."

The euro has fallen around 5 per cent against the Korean won since April, and about 8 percent in the past year, to two-year lows.

In its April-June earnings guidance on Friday, Samsung, valued at US$170 billion and the world's leading maker of TVs, smartphones and DRAM memory chips, estimated operating profit jumped 79 per cent to 6.7 trillion won from a year ago in line with an average forecast in a Reuters survey of 23 analysts.

That would be 14.5 per cent higher than the previous record quarterly profit in January-March. Samsung estimated its second-quarter revenue at 47 trillion won, just below a 50 trillion won forecast.

"Revenue is below our forecast, which suggests price pressure was more severe than had been expected in products such as televisions and home appliances," said Nho Geun-chang, analyst at HMC Investment Securities in Seoul.

"Earnings will be stronger in the current quarter as sales of the high-end Galaxy S III will increase dramatically and drive the telecom division's earnings to above 5 trillion won," he said, predicting shipments of the S III would hit 19 million won this quarter.

Samsung is due to release its full second-quarter results the first since its components chief Kwon Oh-hyun took over as CEO towards the end of this month.



Reuters
 



Feel free to comment on this article using your Facebook account. By submitting your comment, you agree to the Terms and Conditions for the use of this comments feature, as stated here.