ADVERTISEMENT

Samsung Surges to New High on Strong Memory Market Outlook

Samsung Misses Estimates as 5G Competition With Apple Heats Up

Samsung Surges to New High on Strong Memory Market Outlook
A man wearing a protective mask walks past an advertisement for the Samsung Electronics Co. Galaxy Note 20 smartphone at the company's D'light flagship store in Seoul, South Korea. (Photographer: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg)

Samsung Electronics Co. shares rose 7.1% to a record high in Seoul Friday amid signs of a rebound in the memory-chip market and off the back of a surge in earnings.

South Korea’s biggest company posted a 26% increase in operating income to 9 trillion won ($8.3 billion) for the three months ended December in preliminary results. That compares with a 9.52 trillion won average of analyst forecasts. Sales for the quarter were 61 trillion won. The company didn’t provide net income or break out divisional performance, which it will report later this month when it releases final results.

Hours earlier, fellow memory chipmaker Micron Technology Inc. issued a bullish forecast, predicting that the need for dynamic random access memory will likely exceed supply this quarter. The tightness of supply in DRAM is already driving up prices, according to Chief Executive Officer Sanjay Mehrotra. His company and Samsung are two of the largest players in a resurgent market that’s set to expand through increased usage in the automotive sector and more advanced, resource-intensive applications like artificial intelligence.

“We believe memory pricing recovery will take place not only for DRAM but also for NAND” this year, Citi analysts wrote in response to Samsung’s results, citing limited supply growth, low inventories and tight capacity.

Samsung Surges to New High on Strong Memory Market Outlook

Galaxy smartphone sales were weaker over the past quarter as Apple Inc. released its first 5G-compatible iPhones and Chinese rivals launched aggressive campaigns to secure the market share vacated by Huawei Technologies Co.’s sanction-stricken consumer business. Samsung shipped 41 million 5G devices in the past year, according to Strategy Analytics estimates, lagging behind Apple’s 52 million and Huawei’s 80 million sold largely at home in China.

The Suwon-based company plans to unveil its next flagship series, the Galaxy S21, earlier than its usual annual schedule with a Jan. 14 online event. Competitors like Xiaomi Corp., Oppo and Vivo are aggressively positioning themselves to fill the void expected to be left by Huawei in international markets.

Memory chip prices fell in the fourth quarter owing to a slowdown in server demand, while a stronger Korean won during the period also eroded Samsung’s earnings.

“Samsung’s OP was affected by the currency issue and costs for a new fab,” said M.S. Hwang, analyst at Samsung Securities. “The strong earnings and outlook of Micron indicates Samsung’s earnings might have not been too bad. The chip market is on track to recover.”

What Bloomberg Intelligence Says

“Sustained demand in 1H for cloud servers, smartphones and PCs, followed by increased IT spending in 2H, could spur DRAM bit growth of more than 20%. DRAM gigabytes per device may keep expanding amid AI and 5G use.”

- Anand Srinivasan and Marina Girgis, BI analysts

Click here for the research.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.