Samsung Electronics flags 22% jump in operating profit

People walk past the logo of Samsung Electronics at the company’s headquarters in Seoul on January 28, 2016. Slowing global demand for smartphones as well as memory chips dealt a blow to Samsung Electronics as it reported a 40 percent on-year drop in fourth-quarter net profit. AFP PHOTO /

SEOUL , South Korea (AFP) — Samsung Electronics on Thursday flagged its biggest operating profit in more than two years, boosted by cost-cutting efforts and solid sales of its latest flagship smartphone.

In an earnings estimate, the South Korean electronics giant — also the world’s top handset maker — predicted an operating profit of 8.1 trillion won ($7 billion) for April to June, up 22 percent from 6.9 trillion won a year ago.

It is the biggest operating profit since the first quarter of 2014 and beat estimates of 7.4 trillion won among analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News.

Analysts attributed the better-than-expected figures to the firm’s aggressive cost-cutting efforts and brisk sales of the Galaxy S7 — the latest version of its high-end flagship smartphone.

“Samsung’s mobile unit is believed to have performed well thanks to robust sales of Galaxy S7s as well as an overhaul of its low- and mid-end handset line-up,” said Peter Lee, analyst at NH Investment & Securities.

He estimated the firm had sold more than 16 million units of the S7, introduced in March ahead of new launches by competitors including Apple.

Samsung’s mobile business accounts for a lion’s share of the firm’s overall profit, which has been increasingly squeezed by competition both from Apple’s iPhone in the high-end market and by lower-end devices from Chinese rivals like Huawei.

Samsung’s aggressive cost-cutting in marketing played a key role in the strong profit forecast, Greg Roh of HMC Investment said, warning of more competition from Apple later this year.

“With Apple releasing new products in the latter half of the year… I think (Samsung’s) earnings may drop in the second half of this year,” he said.

© 1994-2016 Agence France-Presse

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