Samsung Electronics’ operating profits fell by more than a third in the fourth quarter, the world’s biggest manufacturer of smartphones and memory chips estimated yesterday.
Samsung was hit by a series of difficulties in 2019, with chip stockpiles bloating and prices falling, in contrast to the booming market of previous years.
The premium smartphone market has also grown fiercely competitive with buyers waiting longer before upgrading to new models.
But the figures beat expectations, analysts said, with chip demand starting to improve and strong smartphone sales.
The forecast represented a relative improvement – in each of the first three quarters of 2019 net profits fell by more than half year-on-year.
Samsung Electronics is crucial to South Korea’s economic health.
It is the flagship subsidiary of the giant Samsung Group, by far the largest of the family-controlled conglomerates, known as chaebols, that dominate business in the world’s 11th-largest economy.
In an earnings guidance statement, Samsung Electronics projected operating profits in the October to December period at 7.1tn won ($6.1bn), down 34.2% year-on-year.
Sales were forecast to be flat at 59tn won, it added.
For full-year 2019, it predicted operating profits of 27.7tn won, down 52.9%, on sales down 5.8% to 229.5tn won.
The company has been strained by a protracted trade dispute between China and the US, and been caught up in a diplomatic row between Seoul and Tokyo over historical disputes, with Japan imposing tough restrictions on exports crucial to South Korean tech giants in July.
In another shadow hanging over the firm, its vice chairman and de-facto leader Lee Jae-yong is on trial for the second time over the sprawling corruption scandal that led to the impeachment of South Korea’s former president Park Geun-hye.
A guilty verdict and long prison sentence would deprive the firm of its top decision maker.
Lee was initially jailed for five years in 2017 on multiple convictions including bribery, then released after several of his convictions were quashed, only for the Supreme Court in August to order a retrial.
Its board chairman Lee Sang-hoon was also jailed last month for sabotaging union activities, prompting a rare apology from the firm.
Samsung Electronics shares reached an intraday one-year high in Seoul yesterday and closed up 1.8%, while the KOSPI index was down 1.1% following the Iranian missile attack on US forces in Iraq.
“Sales in memory chips were strongest along with good numbers in its IT and Mobile division,” said Lee Joon-min of Hana Financial Investment.
Analysts expect Samsung to perform better this year on the back of a recovery in chip demand and limited supply, along with new 5G smartphone models and other innovations.
Reduced chip production at one of Japanese rival Kioxia’s plants has seen average NAND flash selling prices “start to rebound”, Avril Wu, an analyst at the Taipei-based market tracker TrendForce told AFP.
“As for DRAM, we expect prices to increase each quarter in 2020,” she said, adding: “The recovery of the DRAM and NAND market is mostly driven by the constriction of supply, but an increase in demand also contributes to this as well.”
Samsung is also pinning its hopes on increasing availability of 5G telecom services driving sales of its handsets – it is a world leader in the technology.
It said last week it had shipped more than 6.7mn Galaxy 5G smartphone devices globally last year, claiming it had more than half the world’s 5G smartphone market as of November.
It has announced a lineup of new products for 2020 including the world’s first 5G tablet, and will unveil new Galaxy devices next month in San Francisco that it said – without offering details – will “shape the next decade of mobile experiences”.
“For Samsung, 2020 will be the year of Galaxy 5G,” said TM Roh, head of the company’s mobile communication division. Samsung withholds net profit and sector-by-sector business performance until it releases its final earnings report, expected later this month.