Strong semiconductor performance makes up for drop in smartphone sales. South Korean behemoth expects Q3 uptick at its mobile communications business unit.

Ken Wieland, contributing editor

July 30, 2020

4 Min Read
Samsung looks chipper in Q2 as the world works from home

It was a case of thanks for the memory chips.

Without a sterling performance here, and a useful one-off gain at its display panel business – we'll come to that in a minute – Samsung Electronics would have found the Q2 going much tougher.

Figure 1: Hot chip: While these go better with mayonnaise, Samsung's chip business saved the tech giant's bacon in Q2. (Source: Gilly on Unsplash) Hot chip: While these go better with mayonnaise, Samsung's chip business saved the tech giant's bacon in Q2. (Source: Gilly on Unsplash)

As it was, helped by strong demand for DRAM chips – plus some trimming of marketing costs – the South Korean giant posted a brisk 23% year-on-year increase in operating profits, to 8.15 trillion Korean won (US$6.8 billion).

Samsung's semiconductor business contributed KRW5.43 trillion ($4.5 billion) of that sum.

Home fries
As more people work from home because of the pandemic, this has translated into stronger PC and data center demand – which is great for memory chip sales.

Semiconductors, which contribute the bulk of revenue at the device solutions division, posted a hearty 13% increase in Q2 turnover, year-on-year, to KRW18.23 trillion ($15.2 billion).

Memory chips now account for 80% of semiconductor business. The share was 76% during the same quarter the year previously.

Figure 3: Flickering pictures: Samsung's display screens - here in action in Times Square - didn't light up Q2 2020. Picture source: Samsung Flickering pictures: Samsung's display screens - here in action in Times Square - didn’t light up Q2 2020. Picture source: Samsung

Samsung gave no details about a "one-time gain" at its display panel business, but it was big enough to improve earnings despite weaker demand.

A Bloomberg report reckoned it was some sort of compensation payment from Apple, in the region of KRW1.1 trillion ($920 million), because it apparently ordered fewer displays than expected.

Down but not out
The economic downturn caused by COVID-19, plus the impact of store closures, has perhaps inevitably meant a shrinking market for products sold by Samsung's IT and mobile communications (IM) business unit.

Q2 sales at the "mobile" segment, largely because of declining smartphone revenue in North America and Europe, fell 18%, year-on-year, to KRW19.8 trillion ($16.6 billion). On a quarter-on-quarter basis the drop was 21%.

Rubbing salt into Samsung's smartphone wounds, market research firm Canalys reported today that Huawei – buoyed by sales in China – dislodged Samsung from top spot in Q2 when it came to smartphone shipments.

Samsung, said Canalys, shipped 53.7 million smartphones during the quarter. That's a massive 30% drop compared with Q2 2019. (Huawei shipped 55.8 million devices.)

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Samsung nonetheless thought smartphone sales will pick up in Q3, helped by the launch of new flagship models, including the Galaxy Note and a new foldable phone.

Samsung does not give a performance breakout of its network's business that sits within IM, but said 5G infrastructure investments were delayed in both domestic and overseas markets due to the "global spread of COVID-19."

The South Korean government's desire for the country's big three operators to spend more on 5G may well have to wait longer than previously expected.

Consolidated Q2 revenue at Samsung Electronics was KRW52.97 trillion ($44.3 billion), down 4% compared with Q2 2019.

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— Ken Wieland, contributing editor, special to Light Reading

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Asia

About the Author(s)

Ken Wieland

contributing editor

Ken Wieland has been a telecoms journalist and editor for more than 15 years. That includes an eight-year stint as editor of Telecommunications magazine (international edition), three years as editor of Asian Communications, and nearly two years at Informa Telecoms & Media, specialising in mobile broadband. As a freelance telecoms writer Ken has written various industry reports for The Economist Group.

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