PREVIEW-Samsung Q4 earnings expected to be hit by Nvidia AI chip supply delay

Reuters01-07 06:52
PREVIEW-Samsung Q4 earnings expected to be hit by Nvidia AI chip supply delay

Samsung Q4 profit seen at 8.2 trln won, up from prior year but down from Q3

Some analysts have cut their estimates to below 8 trln won

Delays to AI chip supply to Nvidia continue to hurt earnings

Micron, Samsung also hurt by slower demand for mobile phones and PCs

By Hyunjoo Jin

SEOUL, Jan 7 (Reuters) - Samsung Electronics 005930.KS, the world's top memory chip maker, is expected to forecast on Wednesday its profit growth continued to slow in the fourth quarter as it struggled to keep up with Nvidia's NVDA.O strong demand for AI chips.

Samsung, also the world's largest smartphone and TV maker, is expected to estimate its operating profit rose to 8.2 trillion won ($5.6 billion) in the quarter ended December, up from a low base of 2.8 trillion won a year earlier but down from 9.18 trillion won in the preceding quarter.

A slew of analysts have cut their earnings estimates in recent weeks, with some expecting operating profit to fall below 8 trillion won.

In October, the South Korean company made a rare apology for its disappointing third-quarter performance and said it was making progress in supplying AI chips to Nvidia.

But it has not provided any update since, and delays to providing Nvidia with high-end chips have continued to weigh on its earnings, analysts said.

In November, Samsung replaced some of its top executives in the chip division, while naming its chip division chief co-CEO and bestowing him direct control of its struggling memory chip business.

Shares of Samsung, South Korea's most valuable stock, slumped 32% last year, lagging the wider market's .KS11 10% loss.

In contrast, Samsung's cross-town rival, SK Hynix 000660.KS, a major supplier of advanced AI memory chips to Nvidia, is expected to post record earnings for the fourth quarter, analysts said.

PRICES UNDER PRESSURE

Lacklustre demand for traditional chips used in mobile phones and PCs and rising output from Chinese rivals has put pressure on chip prices, analysts said.

U.S. chipmaker Micron Technology MU.O last month forecast quarterly revenue and profit below Wall Street estimates, sending shares lower as weak demand for consumer-centric products impacts the Samsung rival's business.

Prices of DDR4 DRAM chips used in personal computers fell as much as 13% in the fourth quarter and are expected to decline another 15% in the current quarter, according to estimates from researcher TrendForce.

This offset the positive impact of the weaker local currency that boosts repatriated earnings from overseas.

The South Korean won dropped to its weakest level in 15 years in December after President Yoon Suk Yeol's martial law decree triggered political turmoil and U.S. President-elect Donald Trump advocates higher tariffs on imports.

Samsung's business of making logic chips designed by customers like Qualcomm QCOM.O is expected to continue to make losses, eroding its chip earnings, analysts said.

Samsung will announce estimates on fourth-quarter revenue and operating profit on Wednesday, with a plan to release detailed results including a breakdown of earnings for each of its businesses in late January.

($1 = 1,464.6300 won)

(Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin; Editing by Anne Marie Roantree and Jamie Freed)

((hyunjoo.jin@thomsonreuters.com; 82-2-3704-5685; Reuters Messaging: hyunjoo.jin.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))

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