Samsung Electronics on Friday said it has cut memory production in the short term, as its quarterly profit plunged significantly (likely 96 percent) amid the chip downturn, in a sharp departure from its previous position that it would not artificially reduce output.
The world’s largest memory chip and smartphone maker earlier in the day estimated its January-March operating profit at 600 billion won ($454.9 million), sharply down from 14.12 trillion won a year ago.
Samsung blamed sluggish demand for tech devices, coupled with customers’ inventory adjustment, for the poor performance, reports Yonhap news agency.
“We are adjusting memory output to a meaningful level for products that we have secured enough inventory to deal with future demand,” the company said in a regulatory filing, in an apparent effort to deal with falling prices and a supply glut.
It did not elaborate on what a meaningful level means.
“While we have adjusted our short-term production plan, we will continue to invest in infrastructure to secure clean rooms and expand R&D expenditures to strengthen our technology leadership as we forecast solid demand in the medium and long term,” it said.
Samsung’s first-quarter sales likely fell 19 percent to 63 trillion won from 77.78 trillion won a year earlier. The data for net profit was not available.
The operating profit was 16.7 percent lower than the average estimate.
The tech giant did not provide the results of each business division and will release its final earnings report later.
Samsung’s Device Solution (DS) division, which oversees its chip business, is forecast to run a deficit of around 4 trillion won, in its first financial loss in 14 years, according to analysts’ estimates, as a surplus chip inventory has been growing significantly amid tapering global demand.
The last time Samsung saw its backbone unit trade at a deficit was the first quarter of 2009 when the world was emerging from the 2008 financial crisis.
The world’s largest memory chip maker forecast the global chip market will shrink 6 percent on-year to $563 billion this year, due to a sharp drop in demand, and warned of difficult conditions continuing throughout the year.