Samsung Tips Better-Than-Expected 3Q Profit
Samsung Electronics forecast a sharp jump in quarterly profit, trumping expectations and sending its shares surging as favorable currency rates and robust component sales appeared have to offset weakness in smartphones.
The extent of the expected quarterly profit gain, its first in two years, will do much to allay concerns that the South Korean tech giant's earnings would not be able shake off the loss of smartphone market share to Apple in the premium segment and to Chinese rivals at the lower end.
Samsung Electronics estimated July-September operating profit would leap 80 percent from a year earlier to 7.3 trillion won ($6.3 billion), higher than a 6.7 trillion won profit Thomson Reuters SmartEstimate derived from 30 analysts.
"There were worries that overall earnings will continue falling as mobile profits declined, but now the numbers make the case that Samsung has the capacity to withstand weakness from the mobile business," said IBK Securities analyst Lee Seung-woo.
Its stock jumped 8.7 percent, the biggest daily percentage gain in nearly seven years. But it remains down 5.7 percent so far this year, underperforming a 4.7 percent advance for South Korea's benchmark index due to the long-standing worries about its earnings outlook.
The world's No.1 maker of smartphones and memory chips guided for a 7.5 percent revenue increase for the third quarter, in line with expectations. It gave no further details about its performance, and will disclose full results in late October.
A 12 percent depreciation of the average won exchange rate against the dollar in the third quarter was widely cited as a key factor behind the bullish earnings forecast. Dongbu Securities analyst Yoo Eui-hyung estimated the favorable currency rate added about 300 billion won to operating profit.
Analysts also said Samsung's chip division likely remained its top profit contributor for a fifth straight quarter due to new smartphone launches from a range of manufacturers, while display profits were probably helped by rising sales to clients such as Huawei Technologies.
And while Samsung has yet to regain lost market share, smartphone earnings likely improved from a year earlier on the back of new lower-end models and the August launch of the Galaxy Note 5 - a premium large screen phone.
South Korea's top two mobile carriers, SK Telecom and KT Corp, also said Samsung will cut prices for Galaxy S6 models by as much as 124,300 won starting Thursday - a move that could boost sales volume but also hurt margins. Samsung declined to comment on the price cuts.
HDC Asset Management fund manager Park Jung-hoon said fourth-quarter operating profit would probably ease from the third quarter due to higher smartphone marketing bills ahead of the year-end holidays.
(Additional reporting by Sohee Kim and Joyce Lee and Tony Munroe; Editing by Stephen Coates and Edwina Gibbs)