Samsung skepticism grows as analysts slash estimates

epa06199079 South Koreans walk next to an advertisement of the new Galaxy Note 8 at the Samsung Electronics headquarters in Seoul, South Korea, 12 September 2017. The Galaxy Note 8 introduced the much-awaited 6.3-inch display and a dual-lens camera setup. It will be available for pre-order from 30 August, and will hit the South Korean market on 15 September.  EPA-EFE/KIM HEE-CHUL

Bloomberg

Asia’s technology rally this year appears to be sputtering as analysts at two firms cut their forecasts yesterday for Samsung Electronics Co.’s fourth-quarter operating profit, fuelling growing skepticism the industry’s gains are running out of gas.
HI Investment & Securities Co. cut its fourth-quarter operating profit estimate for Samsung by 4.8 percent to 15.7 trillion won ($14.5 billion) from 16.5 trillion in a report, reflecting the strong won and bonus payments.
Meanwhile, analysts at Korea Investment Holdings Co. cut their projection for the same figure by 7.8 percent in a report published the same day.
In the past four weeks six firms have lowered their estimates, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Samsung slumped 2.4 percent to a September low on the news, paring its gain for the year to
38 percent. The stock touched a record high in November.
The latest estimate cuts come just weeks after Morgan Stanley analysts had to defend their downgrades of Samsung and its rival Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. after “strong” pushback from some investors.
Shawn Kim, analyst with
Morgan Stanley, cut his rating and price target for Samsung amid concerns about the
South Korean giant’s valuation, earnings growth and the memory chip cycle.

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