Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Samsung Electronics"


25 mentions found


Justin Sullivan | Getty ImagesAsian semiconductor-related stocks mostly slumped on Thursday after Nvidia reported an earnings forecast that failed to meet the lofty expectations of some investors. The sentiment has spilled over to Asia, with stocks tied to Nvidia suppliers as well as other chip companies mostly falling. Selloff in AsiaSemiconductor testing equipment supplier Advantest , which counts Nvidia among its clients, dropped as much as 5.6% on Thursday, the largest chip loser on Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp , which manufacturers Nvidia's high-performance graphics processing units, slipped as much as 1.5%. The company has been a key supplier to Nvidia and is building the world's largest manufacturing facility in Mexico for assembling Nvidia's GB200 superchips, a key component of its next-generation Blackwell family computing platform.
Persons: Justin Sullivan, Daniel Newman, CNBC's Organizations: Getty, Nvidia, Futurum, Asia Semiconductor, Nikkei, Advantest Corp, Softbank Group, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp, Hai Precision Industry, Blackwell, SK Hynix, Samsung Electronics Locations: Santa Clara , California, Asia, Selloff, Mexico, South Korea
Shares of Samsung Electronics jumped on Monday after the company unveiled a surprise plan to buy back about 10 trillion South Korean won ($7.19 billion) worth of its own stock over the next 12 months. Samsung last bought back shares in November 2017, according to data maintained by LSEG. In a regulatory filing, the company said that 3 trillion won of shares will be bought back in the next three months and canceled. While the repurchase of the remaining 7 trillion won worth of shares will be "authorized accordingly by the Board, which will decide on ways to enhance shareholder value, including when and how to use the treasury shares," it added. According to South Korean media, SK Hynix is the first chipmaker in the world to supply fifth-generation HBM3E chips in March to Nvidia.
Persons: Donald Trump, — CNBC's Arjun Kharpal Organizations: Samsung Electronics, South Korean, South, Samsung, LSEG, Board, SK Hynix, Nvidia, CNBC Locations: Seoul, South Korean
But the South Korea electronics giant has now fallen behind its long-time rival SK Hynix in next-generation chips that have been key component for AI silicon leader Nvidia . For years, Samsung was the undeniable leader in this technology, ahead of South Korean rival SK Hynix and U.S. competitor Micron . SK Hynix saw this opportunity. SK Hynix posted record quarterly operating profit in the September quarter. "It is fair to say that Samsung has not been able to close the gap with SK Hynix on the HBM development roadmap," Morningstar's Ito said.
Persons: SeongJoon Cho, HBM, Kazunori Ito, Brady Wang, Morningstar's Ito Organizations: Samsung Electronics Co, Bloomberg, Getty, Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, Nvidia, Samsung, Micron, Morningstar, CNBC, U.S, Counterpoint Research, South Locations: Seoul, South Korea, South Korean, HBM
Meta extends ban on new political ads past Election Day
  + stars: | 2024-11-04 | by ( Jonathan Vanian | In | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Meta extended its ban on new political ads on Facebook and Instagram past Election Day in the U.S. The social media giant announced the political ads policy update on Monday, extending its ban on new political ads past Tuesday, the original end date for the restriction period. The company announced in August that any political ads that ran at least once before Oct. 29 would still be allowed to run on Meta's services in the final week before Election Day. Other political ads will not be allowed to run. Those advertisers will be allowed to make scheduling, budgeting and bidding-related changes to their political ads, Meta said.
Persons: Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg, Jay Y, Lee, Meta Organizations: Meta, Samsung Electronics, South Korean, Seoul Economic, Facebook, U.S, Google, Tech Locations: South Korea, Seoul, U.S
Samsung Electronics on Thursday reported third-quarter sales and operating profit slightly above its own expectations, but its chip business posted a sharply lower profit from the previous quarter. The semiconductor unit reported third-quarter operating profit of 3.86 trillion won (about $2.8 billion), down 40% from the previous quarter. While its memory chip unit benefited by strong demand for its artificial intelligence and conventional server products, Samsung said "inventory adjustments negatively impacted mobile demand." While artificial intelligence drove demand for advanced nodes from its foundry unit, Samsung said mobile and PC demand underperformed. Here are Samsung's results compared with the guidance it issued earlier this month:Revenue : 79.1 trillion won vs. 79 trillion: 79.1 trillion won vs. 79 trillion Operating profit: 9.18 trillion vs. 9.1 trillion wonThose guidance figures were markedly lower than the LSEG estimate for 11.456 trillion won in operating profit.
Persons: Jun Young Organizations: Samsung Electronics, Samsung Locations: China
Asian chip stocks fell on Wednesday after Dutch semiconductor equipment maker ASML posted disappointing sales forecasts, driving down global stocks in the sector. South Korean chipmaking heavyweight SK Hynix, which manufactures high bandwidth memory chips for AI applications for Nvidia, traded 1.6% lower. Net bookings for the September quarter were 2.6 billion euros ($2.83 billion), the company said — well below the 5.6 billion euro LSEG consensus estimate. Nvidia fell 4.7% and AMD lost 5.2%. In its June-quarter earnings presentation, ASML said that 49% of its sales come from China.
Persons: ASML, Foxconn —, Roger Dassen, — Ryan Browne Organizations: Tokyo, Renesas Electronics, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Hai Precision Industry, SK Hynix, Nvidia, Samsung Electronics, Nikkei, AMD, Bloomberg, Biden Locations: Korean, Taiwan, ASML, Veldhoven, Netherlands, China
Asian chip stocks rose on Tuesday after Nvidia closed at a record high overnight as the chip company continues to ride the massive artificial intelligence wave. Stocks tied to Nvidia suppliers as well as other chip companies advanced as the bullish investor sentiment spilled over. Shares of South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix, which manufacturers high bandwidth memory chips for AI applications, for Nvidia surged 2.5%. Samsung Electronics, which is expected to be manufacturing HBM chips for some Nvidia products, saw its shares rise 0.5%. Japanese semiconductor manufacturing firm Tokyo Electron surged 5%, testing equipment supplier Advantest gained 3.6% and Renesas Electronics rose over 4%.
Persons: Stocks Organizations: Nvidia, Korean chipmaker SK Hynix, Samsung Electronics, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Hai Precision Industry, Tokyo, Advantest, Renesas Electronics, SoftBank Group
Read the full apology, translated by Google and CNBC, below:Dear customers, investors, and employees who have always loved Samsung Electronics. Today, the management of Samsung Electronics would like to apologize to you first. It is Samsung Electronics' pride that we can never compromise on. Please give us your support and encouragement so that Samsung Electronics can once again demonstrate its strength. Samsung Electronics Vice Chairman Head of Device Solutions Division Jun Young-hyun—CNBC's Chery Kang contributed to this article.
Persons: Jun Young, LSEG, Young, Chery Kang Organizations: Samsung, Solutions, Google, CNBC, Samsung Electronics, Technology, Device
(Photo by Joan Cros/NurPhoto via Getty Images)South Korean tech giant Samsung Electronics said it expects worse-than-expected profit for the third quarter. Samsung is the leading manufacturer of memory chips, which are utilized in devices like laptops and servers. Analysts polled by LSEG expected an operating profit of 11.456 trillion Korean won ($7.7 billion) for the quarter ended Sept. 30. Samsung's revenue for the quarter was expected to hit 81.96 trillion won ($61 billion), according to LSEG estimates. DRAM refers to dynamic random access memory chips that are often used in laptops, workstations and PCs.
Persons: Joan Cros, Daniel Yoo, Yoo, LSEG Organizations: Samsung, Mobile, Getty Images, Samsung Electronics, Yuanta Securities, Macquarie Equity Research, Reuters Locations: Barcelona, Spain, Korean, Yuanta Securities Korea, South
Aerial view of the capital city of Seoul in South Korea, seen at sunset. South Korea's factory activity contracted at the sharpest pace in 15 months in September as overseas demand slowed for the first time in the year, a private survey showed on Wednesday, suggesting a slow road to a full-blown economic recovery. Output and new orders shrank in September, after gaining for five straight months, with the steepest slump in 11 months and 15 months, respectively. Specifically, export sales to China, Japan, India and the United States weakened, according to the survey. The survey showed backlogs of work, an indicator of near-term activity, fell by the most in five months, while optimism for the year ahead weakened sharply to the lowest level since December 2022.
Persons: Usamah Bhatti Organizations: P Global, P Global Market Intelligence, Employment, Samsung Electronics, SK Locations: Seoul, South Korea, China, Japan, India, United States
Ultimately, the slow starts to August and September did not stand in the way of Wall Street recording a strong third quarter . Tech woes : The S & P 500 tech sector is having a rough day on several different fronts. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB.
Persons: Jim Cramer, There's, Elliott Hill, John Donahoe, Lamb Weston, we'll, Slim Jim, Hunt's, Orville Redenbacher's, We're, Jim Cramer's, Jim Organizations: CNBC, ., Stocks, Federal Reserve, Coterra Energy, Tech, Apple, Citigroup, HP Inc, CDW Corp, Citi, Samsung Electronics, Nvidia, Broadcom, Energy, Nike, Maine Foods, Labor, Jim Cramer's Charitable Locations: East, Iran, Israel, China
These companies are among the leading importers at the 14 major ports that an ILA strike would impact, according to ImportGenius. Out of the 85,000 members, 50,000 would go on strike at the 14 ports that are subject to a master contract that has not been negotiated. Separately, the Port of Montreal union affiliated with the Canadian Union of Public Employees issued a 72-hour notice that its own three-day strike starts on Monday, Sept. 30. Robinson, tells CNBC this strike could exacerbate the U.S. port strike disruption. "We'll shut them down," Daggett said in a recent video message to union members.
Persons: ImportGenius, Peter Sand, James McNamara, Mia Ginter, Robinson, Ginter, Harold Daggett, Daggett, William George, Biden, Taft, Hartley, USMX, McNamara, Maersk Organizations: International Longshoremen's Association, LG Electronics, Walmart, Ikea, Samsung, ILA, Cruise, Brothers, Port, Canadian Union of Public Employees, CNBC, U.S, Home Depot, Hyundai, General Motors, Dollar, . Tire, Michelin, Goodyear, Continental Tire, Glovis, Samsung Electronics, IKEA, US Maritime Alliance, NLRB, Reuters, Biden, Georgia Ports Authority, U.S ., Gulf, Mitre Locations: East Coast, Gulf Coast, Canada, West Coast, West, Coast, Great Lakes, Montreal, C.H, Port of Montreal, of Los Angeles, Lading, New York, New Jersey, Baltimore, Savannah, Houston , North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, New Orleans, Glovis America, In Savannah, Georgia, South, America, Newark, Maine, Texas, Boston , New York, Philadelphia, Wilmington, Norfolk, Charleston, Jacksonville, Tampa , Miami , New Orleans, Mobile, Houston, Gulf, NY, NJ, U.S . East Coast, Port of New York
Micron surged over 15% after strong revenue and profit forecasts driven by AI spending. Other chip stocks also rallied on Thursday after Micron's revenue guidance. AdvertisementMicron surged over 15% on Thursday after reporting strong revenue and profit forecasts, spurred by continued artificial intelligence spending. Micron projected its next quarter's revenues to be between $8.5 billion and $8.9 billion, above the $8.3 billion analysts anticipated. AdvertisementThe chipmaker's rosy forecast is a sign that it is another winner of the AI spending boom.
Persons: , Sanjay Mehrotra, wasn't, Matt Bryson Organizations: Micron, Service, US, Nvidia, Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, Tokyo Locations: HBM, South Korea
Global chip stocks rallied on Thursday after U.S. memory semiconductor maker Micron posted revenue guidance that topped expectations and boosted its share price. SK Hynix and Micron are both suppliers of memory chips to Nvidia's products designed for artificial intelligence processes in data centers. HBM chips are seen as key for AI. Micron reiterated that its HBM chips are sold out for 2024 and 2025. The optimism around Asian chip stocks filtered through to Europe.
Organizations: Micron, Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, Samsung, Tokyo Electron, Nikkei, SoftBank, Semiconductor Locations: U.S, South Korea, Japan, Europe, Dutch
The last major semiconductor shortage happened during the Covid-19 pandemic amid supply chain disruption and a rise in demand for consumer electronics as people were forced to stay and work at home. These GPUs which are housed in data centers are critical for the training of huge AI models which underpin applications like OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Bain said demand for GPUs and AI consumer electronics could be the cause of a chip shortage. The semiconductor supply chain is spread across multiple companies. “Geopolitical tensions, trade restrictions, and multinational tech companies’ decoupling of their supply chains from China continue to pose serious risks to semiconductor supply.
Persons: Bain, Anne Hoecker, TSMC, ” Bain Organizations: Bain & Co, Technology, Nvidia, Qualcomm, Samsung, Microsoft, Bain, CNBC, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Samsung Electronics, Washington Locations: Americas, Taiwan, Netherlands, U.S, China
South Korea-based Samsung Electronics has also been considering investing in building chip manufacturing facilities in the country in the coming years. The Gulf state has been ramping up efforts and investments in developing its domestic tech industry as it works to build its position as a global hub for advanced technology and artificial intelligence. However, the discussions with UAE officials are still in the early stages, the report said. A tug-of-war between the U.S. and China has played out in the region as tech deals speed up and Washington grows increasingly wary over Beijing's influence in the Gulf state. TSMC and Samsung have held discussions with U.S. officials who are worried about potential shipments of advanced AI chips coming from UAE-based plants to China.
Persons: Alex Capri Organizations: Dubai International Financial, Global, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Samsung Electronics, United, Street, TSMC, South Korean, UAE, U.S, Samsung, National University of, CNBC, Wall Locations: Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Burj, Gulf, Taiwan, South Korea, China, Washington, UAE, The U.S
Workers stage a protest to demand higher wages and recognition of their union, at Samsung India's plant in Sriperumbudur, near Chennai on September 11, 2024. Shares of Samsung Electronics fell as much as 3% on Friday, as workers at its southern Indian plant continued to strike, disrupting production at the consumer electronics unit for a fifth day. Hundreds of workers have been on strike since Monday, demanding the electronics conglomerate to recognize their union, raise wages and reduce working hours. The plant, located in the city of Chennai in southern India, makes electronic appliances including televisions, refrigerators and washing machines. Samsung Electronics is one of the leading players in India's smartphone and electronic appliances market.
Organizations: Samsung, Samsung Electronics, union's, Reuters Locations: Sriperumbudur, Chennai, India
Nikkei jumps 3%, leading Asia-Pacific markets higher
  + stars: | 2024-09-12 | by ( Anniek Bao | In | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
A General view showing the Central Business District in Central on May 18, 2023 in Hong Kong, China. Asia-Pacific markets opened higher on Thursday, tracking gains on Wall Street after a volatile session spurred by inflation data. Japan's producer price index rose 2.5% year-on-year in August, less than the expected 2.8% and the 3% reported in the previous month. Investors will also look toward the release of Hong Kong's producer price index for the second quarter this afternoon. The listing is set to be the largest offering in Hong Kong since May 2021.
Persons: Jensen Huang, Goldman Sachs, Hong Organizations: Central Business District, Nikkei, Nvidia, Technology Conference, SK Hynix, Samsung Electronics, SoftBank, Bank of Japan, Reuters, Midea Locations: Central, Hong Kong, China, Asia, Pacific, San Francisco, Tokyo, India
Jensen Huang, co-founder and chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., speaks during an event in Taipei, Taiwan, on Sunday, June 2, 2024. Asian chipmaking heavyweights extended Wall Street's rally as Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang made bullish comments about the AI darling's outlook. Stocks tied to Nvidia suppliers and semiconductor related companies rallied in Asia as the bullish investor sentiment spilled over. Contract chip manufacturer Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp jumped as much as 5% and Hon Hai Precision Industry — known internationally as Foxconn — gained over 4%. Japanese chip-related stocks also soared, including semiconductor testing equipment supplier Advantest which gained over 9%.
Persons: Jensen Huang, Goldman Sachs, Huang, Stocks, Organizations: Nvidia Corp, Nvidia, Goldman, Technology Conference, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp, Hai Precision Industry, TSMC, Tokyo, SoftBank Group, Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix Locations: Taipei, Taiwan, San Francisco, Asia, South Korea
Samsung Electronics, the world's top maker of smartphones, TVs and memory chips, is cutting up to 30% of its overseas staff at some divisions, three sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters. The sources declined to be named because the scope and details of the job cuts remained confidential. Samsung Electronics , the world's top maker of smartphones, TVs and memory chips, is cutting up to 30% of its overseas staff at some divisions, three sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters. The job cuts come as Samsung grapples with mounting pressure on its key units. One of the sources familiar with the plans said the job cuts were being made in preparation for a slowdown in global demand for technology products as the global economy slows.
Persons: Samsung's, Samsung Organizations: Samsung Electronics, Reuters, Samsung, Manufacturing, South Korean, SK Hynix, Apple, Huawei Locations: Americas, Europe, Asia, Africa, South Korea, India, China
Workers at Samsung India plant strike, partly hitting production
  + stars: | 2024-09-10 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Samsung employs under 2,000 workers at its Sriperumbudur plant near the city of Chennai which makes refrigerators and washing machines. The strike comes after Samsung Electronics' biggest union in South Korea held a four-day strike in August demanding higher wages and bonuses after talks with management fell through. Hundreds of workers at a Samsung Electronics plant in southern India have begun an indefinite strike to demand higher wages, partly hitting production on Monday, a union leader told Reuters. E. Muthukumar, who heads the Samsung India union, said many people dressed in company uniform sat outside the plant and demanded a wage hike and better working hours. A Samsung India spokesperson said in an email the company actively engages with "workers to address any grievances they may have and comply with all laws and regulations".
Persons: Muthukumar Organizations: Samsung, Samsung Electronics, Reuters, Samsung India Locations: Chennai, South Korea, India, Samsung India, Noida, Uttar Pradesh
Production at a key Samsung Electronics plant in southern India was disrupted by hundreds of employees striking for higher wages on Tuesday, as top executives sought to resolve a rare episode of labor unrest. Posters saying “Indefinite Strike” went up outside the factory near the city of Chennai, where hundreds of workers in company uniforms set up tents to shade themselves from the heat. People shop inside a store selling Samsung mobile phones and electronics at Mumbai, India on March 6, 2023. A spokesperson for Samsung India said on Monday that it actively engaged with workers “to address any grievances they may have and comply with all laws and regulations.”Around 800 workers signed a register outside the factory to record their protest. One poster outside the factory exhorted state labor officials not to support management, advising instead: “Discuss and solve demands from the labor union with union officials.”
Persons: E, Muthukumar, Francis Mascarenhas, Veera Raghava Rao, , , Prabhu Ram Organizations: Samsung Electronics, Samsung, India’s, LG Electronics, Reuters, Centre of Indian Trade Unions, Samsung’s Southwest, JB, India, Samsung India, Cybermedia Research Locations: India, South Korea, Sriperumbudur, Chennai, Seoul, Samsung’s, Samsung’s Southwest Asia, Gurugram, New Delhi, Mumbai
People walk past the logo of Samsung Electronics in Seoul on July 7, 2022. Global semiconductor and associated stocks fell on Wednesday, following a steep plunge in Nvidia's share price in the U.S. overnight. In the U.S., chipmaker Nvidia plunged more than 9% in regular trading, leading semiconductor stocks lower amid a sell-off on Wall Street. Around $279 billion of value was wiped off of Nvidia on Tuesday, in the biggest one-day market capitalization drop for a U.S. stock in history. Nvidia's value chain extends to South Korea, namely, memory chip maker SK Hynix and conglomerate Samsung Electronics.
Organizations: Samsung Electronics, Samsung Electronics Co, Nvidia, Bloomberg, Department of Justice, Facebook, SK Hynix Locations: Seoul, South, U.S, South Korea
At the end of [the] 1980s, Japanese companies accounted for like 51% of the global semiconductor market. So by doing this ... one thing undercut Japanese semiconductor chip makers' competitiveness in the global market. Another thing [is] that [it] forced open [the] Japanese semiconductor market to foreign players, and this creates opportunity for the U.S., South Korea and Taiwan. And Japanese companies are trying to both develop their own capacity but also attract phone companies to establish fabs there. So by collaborating with international companies, Japanese companies can leverage their existing technology and manufacturing techniques to expand their global share as well.
Persons: Tom Chitty, Fei Xue, Tom Chitty Well, Arjun, Kharpal Fei, Reagan, Arjun Kharpal, Fei, it's, TSMC, Fei Xue Yes, Rapidus, Arjun Kharpal Fei, they're, there's, ASML, you've, He'd, Tom Chitty Fei, Arjun Arjun Kharpal, Tom, Tom Chitty We'll Organizations: TSMC, Rapidus Corporation, Samsung, Economist Intelligence Unit, Economist Intelligence, The Economist, Economist, East, International Relations, U.S, U.S ., Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, IBM, Apple, EV, Japan, Nvidia, Micron, Sony, Nintendo, Canon, South, Samsung Electronics, Tokyo, Screen Holdings Locations: Japan, Taiwan, U.S, Netherlands, Tokyo, beyondthevalley@cnbc.com, East Asia, Fei Xue Japan, South Korea, Japan's, Kyushu, Kumamoto Prefecture, TSMC, That's, China, Kumamoto
Japan stocks rebounded sharply on Tuesday after the Nikkei 225 and the Topix dropped over 12% in the previous session. The Bank of Japan raising rates to their highest level since 2008 on July 30 caused the yen to strengthen to a seven-month high, pressurizing stocks. Markets globally were also spooked by fears of a U.S. recession stoked by a weaker-than-expected jobs report. Real wages in Japan also grew 1.1% in June compared with a year ago, the first time that wages have risen in 26 months. Strong wage growth offers more room for the Bank of Japan to tighten its monetary policy.
Persons: Topix, Korea’s Kospi, Hong, Australia’s, Brent, Dow Organizations: Nikkei, Bank of, Softbank Group Corp, U.S ., South Korean, Samsung Electronics, chipmaker SK Hynix, China’s CSI, . West Texas, Bank of Japan, Reserve Bank of Australia, Dow, Nasdaq Locations: Japan, Asia, Pacific, Bank of Japan, U.S
Total: 25