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Samsung's Top Brass Convene as South Korea's Chip Exports Plunge

Samsung's Top Brass Convene as South Korea's Chip Exports Plunge

(Bloomberg) -- Samsung Electronics Co. Vice Chairman Jay Y. Lee convened a meeting with top executives and discussed ways to deal with the worsening global business environment as South Korea’s chip exports plunged.

The meeting on Saturday at Samsung’s memory-chip plant in Hwaseong, South Korea, came on the day the country reported a 30.5% decline in semiconductor exports for May. Worsening U.S.-China trade tensions and uncertainties surrounding Brexit have weighed heavily on the global economic outlook, and complicated prospects for South Korea, whose economy is seen as a bellwether for world trade.

Samsung's Top Brass Convene as South Korea's Chip Exports Plunge

While Lee didn’t mention the trade war, the de facto head of the world’s biggest memory-chip maker said the business environment is “changing rapidly.” He called for continued investment to secure a long-term lead in technology, according to the emailed statement from Samsung on Sunday.

In April, falling chip sales led Samsung to announce its worst operating profit in years, while the company indefinitely postponed the release of its first foldable smartphone after reports of screen failures. The Suwon, South Korea-based company is expected to report second-quarter earnings next month.

To contact the reporter on this story: Sam Kim in Seoul at skim609@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Shamim Adam at sadam2@bloomberg.net, Stanley James

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