💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 5200.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 18:00:26. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2023-01-29)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
2014-10-08 07:56:33
Saved by the chips
The South Korean giant's smartphone sales are being pummelled
Oct 7th 2014
THE rapid declines of Nokia and BlackBerry show how quickly fortunes can
reverse in the mobile-device market. Is Samsung, now the world s largest maker
of smartphones, next in line? That question imposed itself after Samsung
Electronics said on October 7th that its operating profit in the third quarter
will be less than half the level it was a year earlier, down from 10.2 trillion
won ($9.2 billion) to around just 4 trillion won.
The profit warning was not entirely unexpected. As we pointed out in the print
edition a few weeks ago, Samsung will need to change itself fast over the next
few years in order to survive. Although smartphones have been the firm s money
maker in recent years, its global market share has dropped from nearly a third
to 25% since January. And if Samsung had not lowered its prices and spent more
on marketing, the collapse in sales would have been even greater.
The firm's smartphone sales are being crushed from multiple directions. From
below, low-cost makers from China, such as Xiaomi, and new European brands,
such as Wiko, are attacking Samsung s market, attracting away price-conscious
customers. And from above, Apple is set to lure back wealthier shoppers with
its new iPhone models. Moreover, as the smartphone market starts to reach its
saturation point, the industry's growth as a whole is slowing.
But Samsung s biggest problem is that rival mobile devices are increasingly
being sold alongside software and services that it cannot match. As Samsung is
structurally a hardware company, it would surprise many if it suddenly came up
with great apps or extra services. The firm s best chance may be to stick with
gadgets, and to try to create ones that consumers love so much that they fly
off the shelves.
Samsung seems to have a different plan, however. It is betting that its chip
business, which has done well in the third quarter, will provide more of its
growth. On October 6th the firm announced that it will spend nearly $15 billion
on a new semiconductor plant in South Korea to meet the growing demand for
processors in mobile devices. Although the decline of its smartphone business
will not be an existential threat to Samsung, it remains to be seen whether
making chips will replace all the profits it has lost.