Samsung Electronics is set to announce what market consensus suggests will be a dramatic rise in first-quarter operating profit, fueled primarily by booming memory-chip prices amid heightened AI-related investment. An LSEG SmartEstimate, aggregating forecasts from 29 analysts, puts expected operating income for January-March at 40.5 trillion won, with revenue seen climbing roughly 50 percent versus the prior year. That quarterly profit would represent a record for the company and come close to the 43.6 trillion won it reported for the entire previous business year.
Some forecasters are even more optimistic than the SmartEstimate. For example, Citi projects operating profit of 51 trillion won for the quarter. Market participants point to what Samsung has described as an "unprecedented supercycle" for memory chips as the driving force behind the outsized earnings outlook. "You couldn’t ask for things to be better," said Ko Yeongmin, an analyst at Daol Investment & Securities, commenting on the strength in the memory market.
Drivers behind the expected surge
The anticipated profit leap is anchored in surging DRAM and other memory prices as major technology firms accelerate AI infrastructure spending. Market research cited in forecasts notes a sharp increase in contract DRAM prices: conventional contract prices reportedly doubled in the first quarter from the prior quarter, and are projected to rise by 58-63 percent during the April-June period.
Samsung’s own management has signalled moves to stabilize revenue streams amid volatile demand - co-CEO Jun Young-hyun recently indicated the company is working with large customers to shift to three-to-five year contracts. Those longer-term agreements are intended to provide protection against short-term demand swings.
Where the profits come from - and where they may not
Memory chip operations are expected to account for the bulk of Samsung’s first-quarter profits. By contrast, several of the company’s other businesses are forecast to face tougher conditions. Analysts expect Samsung’s contract chip manufacturing business, which competes with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, to remain unprofitable in the period under review. That unit did, however, receive a recent strategic boost through a partnership with Nvidia to build AI inference processors.
Meanwhile, Samsung’s smartphone and flat-screen divisions are projected to see first-quarter profits roughly halved, according to Kiwoom Securities, a situation attributed to higher memory input costs and intense competition in consumer electronics markets.
Risks and uncertainties
Despite the upbeat near-term earnings picture, several uncertainties could affect Samsung’s growth momentum. The war in the Middle East is a prominent concern for investors looking for management commentary on potential impacts. The conflict has pushed energy costs higher and poses the risk of disrupting supplies of critical production materials. Those developments, in turn, could prompt major technology companies to temper investments in AI data-centre capacity, which would influence future memory demand.
There have also been early signs of easing in DRAM spot prices in recent weeks, a development linked by market participants to rising retail prices for devices such as smartphones and computers that may be denting consumer demand. The unveiling last month of memory-saving technology from Google, named TurboQuant, has been cited as another factor contributing to weakness in memory-stock valuations. Memory-sector equities have reacted: Samsung’s shares fell about 14 percent since the war began on February 28, even though the stock remains up roughly 50 percent year-to-date amid large-scale AI spending plans from major tech players.
Some industry voices stress that a structural shortage in memory supply persists despite recent spot-price moderation. Tobey Gonnerman, president of semiconductor distributor Fusion Worldwide, noted that he views the recent cooling as temporary and that strong demand and backlogs remain. He added that expanding manufacturing to meet total demand would take a long time.
Market expectations and labour considerations
Market researchers such as Trendforce are forecasting continued strength in contract DRAM pricing through the second quarter. At the same time, Samsung faces potential labour cost pressures at home. South Korea-based labour unions have sought changes to bonus schemes and have warned of strike action in May if their demands are not addressed, adding another variable to near-term cost forecasts.
As the company prepares to report results, investors will likely scrutinize commentary from management for any guidance on how the Middle East conflict, spot-price trends and contract negotiations might affect production, margins and future capital allocation. For now, the consensus expectation is for a standout quarter in profitability driven by the memory cycle, while other business units contend with margin pressures and competitive challenges.
Exchange rate used in commentary: $1 = 1,507.4300 won