Samsung Elec sees strong chip demand, mobile recovery as Q2 profit jumps
SEOUL (Reuters) - Samsung Electronics Co Ltd on Thursday forecast strong demand for memory chips in the second half and a recovery in the mobile market to 2019 levels, in a sign the global economy is getting back on track from the coronavirus pandemic.
The world's top maker of memory chips and smartphones posted a 54% jump in operating profit for the second quarter, its strongest result in more than two years, supported by high chip prices and better than expected demand.
"For the second half, market conditions are expected to be favourable for the component business," Samsung said in a statement. "Memory demand will likely be buoyed by new smartphone model launches, with wider 5G availability driving growth."
The company cautioned that a global shortage of non-memory chips still poses a risk to forecasts, while uncertainties related to COVID-19 and geopolitical tensions are likely to persist.
Mobile rival Apple Inc said on Tuesday it expected the impact of the chip shortage to worsen in the fourth quarter and extend to iPhone production.
Still, Samsung pointed to strong fundamentals for the memory chip market on increasing 5G adoption and sustained demand for servers and PCs. It noted its chip inventory is "very low" after it shipped more chips than previously expected in the second quarter.
Samsung plans to unveil its next flagship foldable smartphone on Aug. 11, expected to be compatible with a stylus.
"Samsung is expected to lower the price of its foldables, making them more accessible to consumers."
RECORD FOUNDRY SALES
Companies from cars to smartphone makers are grappling with the unprecedented shortage of chips, sparked by a recovery in consumer demand, limited manufacturing capacity and production disruptions from new coronavirus outbreaks.
Samsung's operating profit in the April-June quarter of 12.6 trillion won ($10.95 billion) was the company's best result since the third quarter of 2018.
Mobile profits dipped from the previous quarter due to constrained supply of mobile processor chips and pandemic-related production disruptions.
The company said it shipped 60 million handsets in the second quarter, down from 81 million in the first. Production at Samsung's Vietnam smartphone plant was affected by COVID-19 lockdowns, but was expected to normalise over July, it said.