Samsung Electronics made a record $5.2
billion profit in the first quarter, overhauling Nokia as the world’s top
mobile phone seller, and its Galaxy smartphones outstripped Apple’s iPhone at
the high-end of the market.
The South Korean group’s handset division
shifted more than 20,000 Galaxy phones an hour in the quarter and contributed
most of its operating profit.
That company’s shares hit a lifetime high
after the results, pushing its market value to $190 billion, 11 times that of
Japanese rival Sony, though still only a third of Apple’s, the world’s most
valuable company.
Samsung sold 93.5 million handsets in the
quarter, more than one in every four sold, according to Strategy Analytics,
toppling Nokia from the top spot after 14 years.
The total included 44.5 million
smartphones, giving Samsung a 30.6 per cent share of the high-end market.
Apple’s sales of 35.1 million iPhones gave it a 24.1 per cent share.
“Samsung and Apple are out-competing most
major rivals and the market is at risk of becoming a two-horse race,” said Neil
Mawston, an analyst at Strategy Analytics.
CLSA analyst Matt Evans said in a recent
report that Samsung’s smartphone success in the first quarter was the flip-side
of Nokia’s disappointment.
Nokia, which had long been the leader in
the booming smartphone segment until last year, has suffered a sharp decline in
sales since it abandoned its own smartphone operating system and switched to
the largely untried Windows Phone. It managed to sell only 12 million smartphones
in the first quarter.
The near duopoly in high-end smartphones is
unlikely to come under much threat this year or next, according to Bernstein
analysts, and Samsung will look to keep that momentum going next week with the
launch in London of a third generation of Galaxy S, hoping to boost sales ahead
of the summer Olympics, where the group is among the leading sponsors.
“The Galaxy S 3’s specifications are
expected to be sensational and it’s already drawing strong interest from the
market and consumers,” said Brian Park, an analyst at Tong Yang Securities.
The new Galaxy will be powered by Samsung’s
quad-core microprocessor, which the company hopes to see used in handsets sold
by Nokia, HTC and Motorola, as well as Apple, its biggest customer for components.