Samsung’s 21% sales jump banishes worst fears of inflation hit

SAMSUNG Electronics Co. reported a better-than-anticipated 21% jump in revenue, assuaging investors’ worst fears about the impact of weakening consumer demand and soaring materials costs on tech giants.

The marginal beat offset weaker-than-expected operating profit, reflecting margin pressures from rising inflation. Operating profit growth slowed to its lowest in more than two years, with 14 trillion won (US$10.7 billion) for the three months ended June, South Korea’s biggest company said Thursday in a statement. Analysts had estimated 14.6 trillion won on average.

Sales of 77 trillion won were helped by the South Korean won, which weakened against the US dollar during the period. Samsung will provide net income and split out divisional performance with its full report at the end of this month.

Shares were up as much as 3.2% in morning trading in Seoul.

“The results were less bad than expected,” said Song Myung-sup, an analyst at HI Investment & Securities. “There were huge worries and earnings estimates were getting lowered. But the 14 trillion won results come within the boundary of expectations.”

The Korean electronics giant is among the first major tech firms to report earnings after a pivotal quarter for the industry. The company’s primacy as a memory chips supplier and leading smartphone maker means its decelerating profit growth may deepen concern about tech demand across enterprise and consumer sectors.

Samsung’s smartphone shipments in the second quarter might have fallen by more than 10 million units to 63 million compared to the previous three months, according to Eugene Investment & Securities analyst Lee Seung-woo. Sales of TVs and PCs also fell significantly compared to the first quarter as people spent less on pricey IT products.

South Korea’s chip stockpiles jumped more than 50% in May, according to the national statistics office, signaling sluggish consumer demand is directly impacting the memory chip industry. Samsung and compatriot SK Hynix Inc. are two of the leading trio of memory makers supplying the world’s data centers and electronics makers. Both have seen their share prices slump by over 20% this year as worries over a potential recession grow.

“Macro uncertainty still lingers globally,” said Nam Dae-jong, an analyst at eBEST Investment & Securities Co. “The Fed’s interest rate hikes have triggered FX fluctuations while raw materials and logistics costs continue to rise. There is also growing uncertainty over demand.”

Samsung warned of an “immense” challenge over its business outlook during its last earnings call as global macro risks like inflation and the Russia-Ukraine war threatened ripple effects. Consumers and enterprise clients are cutting their spending to hunker down before a potential recession, while rising interest rates and costs are directly hitting their disposable income.

US rival Micron Technology Inc., the third-biggest DRAM maker, last week gave a grim outlook for the current quarter with lowered expectations for tech spending. — Bloomberg