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Samsung says Q3 operating profits soar, but misses forecast

SEOUL (AFP) South Korea’s Samsung Electronics said Thursday that its operating profits soared 277 per cent on-year to USD6.6 billion, but missed expectations as it struggled to leverage demand for chips used in artificial intelligence servers.

The world’s largest memory chip maker posted an operating profit of KRW9.18 trillion (USD6.6 billion) “largely due to one-off costs”.

It also warned in a statement that “the strength of the Korean won against the US dollar resulted in a negative impact on company-wide operating profit”.

Although operating profit nearly tripled compared to a year ago, it fell short of market expectations and was down 12 per cent compared to the previous quarter.

Revenue rose 17.35 per cent to KRW79.1 trillion (USD57.2 billion), its highest quarterly record, Samsung said.

The firm is the flagship subsidiary of South Korean giant Samsung Group, by far the biggest of the family-controlled conglomerates that dominate business in Asia’s fourth-largest economy.

(FILES) Employees walk past logos of the Samsung Electronics Co. at its office in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2024. PHOTO: AP

Semiconductors are the lifeblood of the global economy, used in everything from kitchen appliances and mobile phones to cars and weapons.

The company’s semiconductor division reported KRW3.86 trillion in operating profit, a 40-per cent sharp decrease compared to last quarter.

Samsung said its performance had decreased due to “a reduced reversal of inventory valuation loss compared to the previous quarter, one-off expenses such as the provision of incentives, and currency effects due to a weak dollar”.

Rare apology 

 

Samsung has been lagging behind South Korean giant SK hynix when it comes to high bandwidth memory (HBM) chips used in AI chipsets, which experts have blamed for the lacklustre results.

This month, Samsung management issued a rare, separate apology, acknowledging the company was facing a “crisis”.

“Due to results that fell short of market expectations, concerns have arisen about our fundamental technological competitiveness and the future of the company,” said the statement, which was signed by Jun Young-hyun, the vice chairman of the company’s device solutions division.

“Our management will take the lead in overcoming the crisis… We will make the serious situation we are currently facing an opportunity for a resurgence.”

Samsung shares have dropped sharply 33 per cent since its peak in July and the company has lost over USD120 billion of market value during that time.

Shares in Samsung rose 0.3 percent in Seoul on Thursday in early trading.

The rare apology came about a week after the tech giant said it intended to reduce staff in some of its operations in Asia, describing the move as “routine workforce adjustments”.

Bloomberg reported that the layoffs could affect about 10 per cent of the workforce in those markets.

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