Samsung is Raking in Cash; Now it Needs to Spend Some -- Heard on the Street
January 28 2021 - 5:26AM
Dow Jones News
By Jacky Wong
Samsung Electronics has been building up an impressive cash
hoard over the past few years. Now, with the competition moving
fast, it is time to spend to make sure the company can stay on the
leading edge of the semiconductor and consumer-electronics
industries.
The South Korean technology company had a strong 2020: Operating
profit rose 30% year over year as the Covid-19 pandemic drove
demand for memory chips, both in personal computers and data
centers. The boom, however, now seems to be losing momentum.
Operating profit last quarter dropped 27% from the previous quarter
on a strong won and declining memory prices. The company expects
profit to weaken this quarter.
The company has been building up dry powder: Net cash at the end
of 2020 stood at 104.5 trillion won, equivalent to $93.4 billion, a
61% rise from 2017. Samsung announced a special dividend Thursday
as well as raising its regular dividend in the next three
years.
Samsung should also try to put some of that cash into growth.
And the company has hinted that it could soon do exactly that.
During the earnings call Thursday, it said it is optimistic about
meaningful mergers and acquisitions in the coming three years.
Samsung hasn't made a major acquisition since 2017. Acquiring a
non-memory semiconductor or communications technology could help
the company diversify away from the notoriously cyclical
memory-chip business. More than half of Samsung's operating profit
last year came from its semiconductor division, mostly from memory
chips.
Samsung should spend more internally outside of memory chips
too. The company didn't provide explicit guidance on capital
expenditure but indicated that it will likely go up, as will
spending on research and development, due to intensifying
competition--especially in foundries, the business of making chips
for other companies.
The world's largest foundry, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing
Co., said two weeks ago that it would increase its capital spending
this year by 45% to 62%. Samsung will likely have to spend big to
keep up with the market leader. Samsung is also considering an
investment of up to $17 billion to build a chip-making factory in
the U.S., according to documents and people familiar with the
company's plans. The company said no decision has been reached
yet.
Samsung's leading position in memory chips has rewarded
shareholders handsomely. Now it's time to look to the future.
Write to Jacky Wong at JACKY.WONG@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 28, 2021 06:11 ET (11:11 GMT)
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