Samsung Elec Q2 net disappoints, outlook grim

July 25 06:05:03 AM, Yahoo News

Employees of Samsung Group work at the company's headquarters in Seoul in this April 22, 2008 file photo. (Jo Yong-Hak/Reuters)

Reuters - Samsung Electronics Co Ltd (005930.KS), the world's top maker of memory chips, posted lower-than-expected quarterly profit and faces a tough second half with a sluggish chip market and lower margins in flat screens and mobile phones.

Shares in the South Korean group, valued at about $85 billion, tumbled more than 4 percent on Friday.

Samsung, also the world's top maker of liquid crystal display (LCD) screens, acknowledged it was unlikely to achieve a sharp recovery in its third quarter results.

Chu Woosik, executive vice president of investor relations, told a conference call that visibility for the memory chip market outlook was "quite low."

"Recovery in the memory chip sector will not come anytime soon as the macro backdrop remains weak, though it will not get worse from here," said Jay Kim, an analyst at Hyundai Securities.

Next year looks equally daunting, with the global economic slowdown set to impact all consumer electronics, from flat-screen TVs to mobile phones and personal computers.

April-June net profit rose 51 percent to 2.14 trillion won ($2.12 billion) from 1.42 trillion won last year during a market slump for dynamic random access memory (DRAM) chips used mainly in personal computers. Samsung earned 2.19 trillion won in January-March.

Analysts had predicted net profit of 2.30 trillion won.

Operating profit for April-June rose to 1.89 trillion won from 911 billion won a year ago, below the 2.08 trillion won predicted by analysts. First-quarter operating profit was 2.15 trillion won.

WEAK CHIP OUTLOOK

The operating margin in Samsung's semiconductor unit rose to 6 percent from 4 percent in the first quarter, helped by technological advances, but was still a far cry from the 31 percent profit margin posted in late 2006.

Makers of DRAM chips had hoped that spending cutbacks and a demand pickup ahead of the gift-giving season would trigger a second-half recovery, but the prospects for a significant rebound are fading. Many analysts predict the tailspin could drag on into the second quarter of 2009.

On Wednesday, Powerchip (5346.TWO) and Nanya Technology (2408.TW), Taiwan's two largest DRAM makers, posted their fifth straight quarter of losses.

In another sign of the industry's distress, world No.2 chip maker Hynix (000660.KS) on Thursday said it would suspend production at its U.S. plant and consider selling it.

Steep price drops have also hurt earnings from NAND flash memory chips, used in portable gadgets. Samsung said it expected NAND oversupply to persist through the second half.

Samsung's display division posted a strong quarter, helped by robust sales of flat-screen TVs. The division's margin was 21 percent versus the first quarter's 23 percent.

Samsung, second only to Nokia (NOK1V.HE) in the handset market, sold 45.7 million phones in April-June, a slight dip from 46.3 million in January-March. Mobile margins also eased to 13 percent from the first quarter's 15 percent.

April-June revenue rose to 18.14 trillion won from 14.63 trillion won a year ago.

By 0212 GMT, Samsung shares were off 3.75 percent at 591,000 won, while the broader KOSPI stock index (.KS11) was down 1.3 percent.

The stock had jumped 4.6 percent the previous day on talk of a share buyback, but Samsung instead announced a modest interim dividend.

(Additional reporting by Kim Yeon-hee and Miyoung Kim, Editing by Jonathan Hopfner and Ian Geoghegan)

Related articles

  • IBM Shifts Focus To Cloud Computing with New Services
    NewsFactor - IBM is getting in the cloud. After a string of announcements over the past few weeks from Citrix, Red Hat, VMware, Cisco and Hewlett-Packard, Big Blue is launching an initiative to extend…
  • Gov't Database Errors Leading To Unconstitutional Searches?
    Wired is running a story about a case the Supreme Court will be hearing on Tuesday that relates to searches based on erroneous information in government databases. In the case of Herring vs. US 07-513,…
  • Facebook co-founder leaves for new venture
    AFP - The college roommate who helped Mark Zuckerberg start Facebook is leaving the fast-growing social networking website in a matter of weeks to create a new Internet technology firm.
  • Microsoft Programming Contest Hacked and Defaced
    davidmwilliams writes "Microsoft followed their major annual Tech-Ed event in Australia with a week-long programming contest called 'DevSta,' to find 'star developers.' While the quantity and quality of…
  • SAP says business turmoil hurting its revenue
    AP - Shares of SAP AG plunged Monday after the business software maker said it saw a sudden drop in business at the end of September as global financial turmoil escalated.
  • NSA Open Sources Tokeneer Research Project
    An anonymous reader writes to mention that the Tokeneer research project has been released to the open source community by the US National Security Agency. The main goal of this project was to show how…
  • EBay cutting 1,600 jobs, 10 percent of work force
    AP - After a series of changes designed to draw more people to its online marketplace, eBay Inc.'s latest alteration is aimed at its own employees. The auction site operator said Monday it will cut about…
  • iPhone 3G Entices Mobile-Carrier Defections
    NewsFactor - The NPD Group, a market-research firm, reports that 30 percent of the U.S. consumers who purchased Apple's iPhone 3G from its release on July 11 through August switched mobile carriers in…
  • Netflix trims outlook and shares sink
    Reuters - Online DVD rental company Netflix Inc cut its fourth-quarter outlook, blaming the U.S. economic turmoil for weaker-than-expected subscriber growth in the third quarter and driving its shares…
  • OpenGL ES 2.0 Programming Guide
    Martin Ecker writes "Mobile phones and other embedded devices are getting more and more powerful each year. The availability of dedicated hardware for 3D rendering is becoming increasingly ubiquitous,…
  • New Readers, Software Heat Up E-Book Market
    NewsFactor - The battle over e-readers is heating up rapidly, thanks to new hardware entries from the world's two leading e-book manufacturers and the surprising popularity of e-book software on Apple's…
  • Judge orders RealNetworks to pull copying software
    AP - RealNetworks Inc. said Monday it had temporarily stopped distributing its DVD copying software, RealDVD, at a federal judge's request in a copyright case brought by Hollywood studios.
  • Ford's 2010 cars will let parents set speed limit for teens
    AP - So you think junior is a little too lead-footed when he drives the family car? Starting next year, Ford Motor Co. will give you the power to do something about it.
  • Fraud plagues prepaid calling card market
    AP - Rosalba Posada can tick off a list of problems she has encountered trying to use prepaid calling cards to stay in touch with family back in Colombia.
  • Encrypted Images Vulnerable To New Attack
    rifles only writes "A German techie has found a remarkably simple way to discern some of the content of encrypted volumes containing images. The encrypted images don't reveal themselves totally, but in…
  • Apple's 'Brick' Is an Innovative Manufacturing Process
    NewsFactor - New laptops from Apple, maker of such advanced products as the iPhone, the iPod and the Mac, could be made from bricks. An aluminum brick, that is.
  • Oracle slides 8 percent after SAP warns on quarter
    Reuters - Shares of Oracle Corp , the world's third-largest software maker, slid more than 8 percent to $17.84 on Monday after German rival SAP AG said it saw business drop off at the end of the third…
  • Suit against magazine-sharing site settled
    CNET - Just months after its launch, the magazine-sharing Web site Mygazines.com is largely cutting back on the free content it offers, after reaching a settlement agreement in a suit filed by a group…
  • Judge halts sales of RealDVD
    CNET - A judge has ordered RealNetworks to suspend the sale of RealDVD, the controversial software that hands users the ability to copy and store films to a hard drive, according to a report published…
  • Verizon says $28.1B buyout of Alltel on track
    AP - Verizon Wireless says it is moving forward with plans to acquire Alltel Corp. for $28.1 billion, although the country's financial climate has worsened since the companies reached an agreement four…
  • ASEAN may slash mobile roaming fees by half next year: report
    AFP - Roaming fees for mobile phone users in Southeast Asia making calls outside their own country may be cut by half early next year, according to report Sunday citing a Malaysian minister.
  • Apple cures the common cold and other stuff
    CNET - Seth Weintraub of 9to5Mac, a blogger with good sources within the Macintosh community, is reporting that Apple has invented a new manufacturing process for MacBooks.
  • Getting Paid To Abandon an Open Source Project?
    darkeye writes "I'm facing a difficult dilemma and looking for opinions. I've been contributing heavily to an open source project, making considerable changes to code organization and quality, but the…
  • Report Says China Will Demand Source Code
    An anonymous reader alerts us to a two-week-old story that hasn't gotten much traction in the press to date. A Japanese newspaper and the AP report that China plans to demand source code from hardware…
back to top
News Buzz © 2007. About Us Politics | Entertainment | Business | Tech