Samsung estimated to have sold 83m smartphones during the quarter, down 6 per cent from a year earlier
Seoul: Samsung Electronics Co. said its first quarter net
profit plunged 39 per cent as consumers switched to bigger iPhones, squeezing
earnings from its mobile business to less than half what they were a year
earlier.
The company reported Wednesday that its January-March net
profit was 4.63 trillion won ($4.35 billion), compared with 7.49 trillion won a
year earlier. That was lower than the forecast of 4.97 trillion won in a survey
of analysts by financial data provider FactSet.
The larger-than-expected drop was due to a big profit plunge
in Samsung’s mobile business. The maker of Galaxy smartphones said its mobile
division generated 2.74 trillion won in quarterly profit compared with 6.43
trillion won a year earlier.
Analysts estimate Samsung sold more smartphones than Apple
during the quarter. But the Korean firm lost ground in the more profitable
high-end market to Apple after the maker of the iPhone began offering models
with bigger screens last fall. Before that, large screens were a feature that
set Samsung phones apart.
According to Counterpoint Technology Market Research, sales
of iPhones were also strong in countries where Samsung’s presence looms large,
such as its home market South Korea and Vietnam, which has Samsung’s biggest
phone factory.
Apple on Tuesday reported that it sold 61 million iPhones in
the first three months of the year, an increase of 40-percent from a year
earlier, which drove another quarter of blowout profits.
Samsung, which does not disclose its smartphone shipments,
is estimated to have sold 83 million smartphones during the quarter, down 6 per
cent from a year earlier, according to Counterpoint. But most of the sales
increase came from mid-level handsets like the Galaxy A series, which sell for
less than its flagship models. The period preceded the launch of the latest
versions of Samsung’s flagship smartphones.
Samsung said is quarterly revenue fell 12 per cent from a
year earlier to 47.12 trillion won while operating income dropped 30 per cent
to 5.98 trillion won, in line with Samsung’s earnings preview earlier this
month.
The Korean company said its profits will increase during the
second quarter as the Galaxy S6, and S6 Edge with a curved screen, expand sales
after their global launch this month. But the shipments of those high-end
phones will not be big enough to offset an expected decrease in sales of
middle- to low-end models, it said. Marketing expenses will also go up,
pressuring its profit margin.
The initial sales of the S6 were “great” but the pre-orders
of Samsung’s new smartphones were “no match to the iPhone 6,” said Tom Kang,
director at Counterpoint.
Samsung is betting big on the Galaxy S6 series to claw back
sales in key markets such as China, where it lost its leading position to Apple
and Xiaomi. As part of its push to make new smartphones more attractive,
Samsung acquired mobile-payment start-up LoopPay this year and introduced
Samsung Pay, a mobile payment system on the latest Galaxy phones. The company
also introduced new design elements to the S6 Edge phone, which has screens
that curve.
Samsung said demand for the S6 Edge has exceeded expectations
but limited supplies of the curved displays restricted sales. Park Jinyoung,
vice president at Samsung’s mobile communications business, said supplies of
the curved displays will improve during the second quarter.
Analysts said the improvement in Samsung’s mobile profit
hinges on how quickly the company can catch up with demand for the S6 Edge
smartphones, which cost about $100 more than the S6.
But even then, they questioned if the Galaxy S6 series would
be strong enough to stave off competition from the bigger iPhones.
“The shipments of the plain S6 model and the Edge model will
be not bad, but it won’t be surprising,” said Peter Yu, an analyst at BNP
Paribas. “What is important is how many they can sell during the second half of
this year.” Apple traditionally introduces a new iteration of the iPhone in the
fall.
The only business that saw an improvement in profit during
the first three months of this year was Samsung’s component division that
supplies chips and displays for makers of smartphones and televisions,
including Apple Inc. Samsung’s consumer electronics division that makes
television sets had a bad quarter, losing 140 billion won.
Looking ahead, Samsung said its overall earnings will
increase during the second quarter from the previous three months, as sales of
premium smartphones such as its Galaxy series as well as the iPhones drive
demand for its semiconductor products and display panels.
Source: http://gulfnews.com/business/sectors/technology/samsung-s-profit-hit-by-bigger-iphones-sinks-39-per-cent-1.1502122