SEOUL, South Korea: Samsung Electronics’ Vice Chairman Lee Jae-yong has vowed to keep up robust investments in key businesses as South Korea’s leading company weathers slowing demand and the impact of trade clashes between Washington and Beijing.
In a weekend meeting with top Samsung executives, Lee called for “unwavering focus on long-term, fundamental leadership in technology” and reaffirmed plans to invest $112 billion (133 trillion won) to strengthen the company’s presence in the non-memory chip market.
Samsung also last year announced a three-year plan to invest 180 trillion won ($152 billion) to strengthen its memory chip segment and other key sectors and hire 40,000 more people in the process.
“In this rapidly changing environment, we need to keep our unwavering focus on the long-term, fundamental leadership in technology,” Lee said in a statement provided by Samsung.
Samsung is the world’s biggest maker of memory chips and smartphones, strong both in components and finished products.
The company saw its operating profit during the last quarter drop more than 60 percent from a year earlier because of falling chip prices and sluggish demand for display panels.
Samsung has forecast that memory chip prices will continue to fall in the second quarter despite expectations for a modest improvement in demand for mobile products.
Analysts say potential US sanctions on Chinese technology giant Huawei could hurt Samsung by further reducing demand for chips used such products.
In the long run, though, Samsung’s smartphone business could benefit from sanctions against its leading rival in that sector.
Samsung to keep up investment as trade war raises risks
Samsung to keep up investment as trade war raises risks
- Samsung Electronics’ Vice Chairman Lee Jae-yong reaffirmed plans to invest $112 billion
- The company saw its operating profit during the last quarter drop more than 60 percent from a year earlier