Samsung's profit craters as demand for phones and memory chips remains low

nanoguy

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Bottom line: Samsung's revenue in the first three months of 2023 totaled 63.8 trillion won ($47.5 billion), an 18 percent year-over-year drop. However, profits evaporated as the company incurred a huge loss in the semiconductor business. The C-suite at the Korean giant is still optimistic about a rebound in consumer demand in the second half of 2023, but that hinges on China's economic recovery.

Samsung's semiconductor business isn't doing well. The company reported a record 4.6 trillion won ($3.4 billion) loss from the chip division in the first quarter of 2023, which had been one of its main revenue drivers for the past several years. This starkly contrasts the 8.5 trillion won ($6.3 billion) in profit recorded in the same period last year.

Overall, the Korean giant's quarterly profit took a 95 percent dive to about 640 billion won (~$478 million), making it the worst result in 14 years. Economic uncertainty and lower demand for consumer electronics are largely to blame for Samsungs's losses, and this was further exacerbated by PC and smartphone manufacturers that have been hoarding chips so their factories wouldn't be starved when demand eventually returns to meaningful levels.

Like competitors Micron and SK Hynix, Samsung hopes the second half of this year will see higher demand for memory chips as existing inventories are cleared and new product launches presumably entice consumers and enterprises to upgrade. This will depend greatly on China, which is the largest market in the world for PCs, smartphones, and servers.

In the meantime, the Korean tech giant has slashed memory chip production in an effort to prevent further price drops and safeguard its long-term profitability. Research and development spending budgets will remain unchanged, as Samsung likes to spend during economic downturns to maintain its competitive edge. Notable developments are 2nm GAA and 2nd generation 3nm process nodes, with the first planned to be used in mass production as soon as 2025.

During an investor call, Samsung executives noted the extension of the mobile GPU partnership with AMD, as well as the possibility that future flagships could once again feature Exynos chipsets starting next year.

Samsung's mobile division (MX) fared better in the three months ending in March, thanks to the Galaxy S23 series selling better than expected and overall shipments surpassing those of Apple's iPhone. The company says it made 3.9 trillion won ($2.9 billion) in profit from the MX unit.

In related news, competitor SK Hynix also reported a significant quarterly loss in profit and said it expects memory prices to continue their decline in the coming months. The Korean company believes consumer appetite for higher capacity memory and surging demand for high-performance servers for artificial intelligence will lead to prices stabilizing sometime in the second half of this year.

Image credit: Harrison Broadbent

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Economic uncertainty and lower demand for consumer electronics are largely to blame for Samsungs's losses, and this was further exacerbated by PC and smartphone manufacturers that have been hoarding chips so their factories wouldn't be starved when demand eventually returns to meaningful levels.
:rolleyes: I really love how companies like to spin things. Could it be that the hardware people have is already more than adequate for thing things most people do with their devices - like browsing the internet and reading/sending e-mail? Not everyone is a gamer, and not everyone needs to have the latest greatest hardware for what they normally do with their PCs.

Maybe someday, companies that like to spin things in this fashion will wake up to reality.
 
This was bound to happen and it's the same problem Apple is having. Everyone already has a phone and even mid-range phones are plenty powerful. So what's the incentive to keep buying $1000 phones every year with minimal improvements? These companies thought the good times would last forever and everyone would keep buying a new phone every year for the rest of their lives. High refresh rate screens, haptic feedback, folding screens, etc. are all great gimmicks, but at some point people are going to say enough is enough.
 
Take good care of your phone, it should last you 4-6 years (5.5 years with my S8, but the battery is showing its age). There is zero reason to constantly upgrade your phones anymore.

Samsung isn't the only phone company looking at lower sales numbers. I'm sure other factors have to be taken into play such as inflation, price gouging, stagnation of technology in phones and so on.
 
I average about 5 years with a phone so my S21 won't be updated until at least S26, or maybe say second hand iPhone 16 pro max when iPhone 18 is released.
 
Here in southeast asia samsung is getting a lot of competition from the chinese manufacturers for the low-end to mid-end segment. the M and A series directly compete with the chinese: xiaomi, oppo, vivo, tecno, poco, realme, iqoo and infinix. not surprised at all considering how crappy the A lineup has been for the past two years.

only the S series ever compete with apple but even then for this emerging market the sales are nothing compared to the low-end A series. tens of millions of people with average of 3500USD yearly wage simply can't afford S series phone.
 
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