Samsung Electronics Co., the world's largest maker of memory chips and liquid-crystal display (LCD) panels, estimated Friday that its operating profit for the October-December period fell below market estimates, as prices of its mainstay memory chips and LCD panels plunged on sluggish demand.
Samsung put its fourth-quarter operating profit at 3 trillion won ($2.67 billion), down 12.8 percent from a revised profit of 3.44 trillion won a year earlier, the company said in a regulatory filing. The preliminary estimate is also a 38.3 percent drop from the previous three months and the company's lowest quarterly profit in 2010.
Samsung was forecast to have posted an operating income of 3.33 trillion won in the quarter, according to the median estimate of analysts polled by Yonhap News Agency.
Third-quarter consolidated sales were estimated at 41 trillion won, up 4.46 percent from a year earlier, according to the company's earnings guidance, which did not provide figures for each of its business divisions.
The figures are consolidated, meaning they include results from overseas affiliates.
Market analysts estimated that Samsung's flagship semiconductor division and LCD panel-making business logged lower profits, while losses in its TV business widened from the previous quarter on aggressive marketing fees.
Slowdowns in sales of personal computers battered prices of dynamic random access memory (DRAM), which reads and writes data on PCs. The spot price of the benchmark 2-gigabit DDR3 DRAM plunged 54 percent in December from three months earlier, according to analysts at LIG Investment & Securities Co., who estimated the profit from Samsung's semiconductor division nosedived 60 percent from the third quarter.
The TV business likely posted a wider loss after it splurged on marketing fees to reduce TV inventory at the end of the year, which took a toll on its bottom line, analysts said.
But Samsung's mobile communications division helped cushion the blow, they said, thanks to the robust demand for its new high-end mobile products.
Samsung met its 10 million sales target for the Galaxy S phone, it said earlier this week. The company also threw down the gauntlet on Apple Inc.'s iPad with the Galaxy Tab in October, targeting the emerging market for premium tablets.
Samsung, the world's second-biggest maker of mobile phones after Nokia Corp., will likely turnaround from the current quarter, according to the analysts, as prices of DRAM and LCD panels are expected to trend upward as early as in the first quarter of this year.
Global chipmakers scaled back their production of DRAM devices amid the industry-wide downturn, which fares well for a leading company like Samsung. Demand for TVs is set to go upward during the upcoming holidays in China, which will stoke LCD orders from TV makers.
Samsung plans to disclose its fourth-quarter earnings later this month.
Shares of Samsung Electronics were trading at 918,000 won on the Seoul bourse as of 9:25 a.m., down 1.29 percent from the previous session.
(Yonhap News)