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Monday 06 October 2014 8:11 am  |  Updated:  Friday 07 June 2019 12:03 pm

Forget the Galaxy S5 and smartwatches, this is why Samsung is betting £10bn on the chips inside mobile devices

By: Lynsey Barber

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Samsung is making its biggest bet yet on the chip making side of its business with plans to spend £9.7bn on a new factory to increase production of semiconductors.

The Korean giant is investing in the tech behind the tech, rather than its more well known mobile hardware business which makes the flagship Galaxy devices, as it faces increasing competition for mobile consumers.

While Samsung’s mobile division remains its most lucrative, rivals such as Apple and upstart Xiaomi are beginning to eat away at that profit which declined consecutively over the last three quarters, from 36.57tn won (£21.4bn) won to 28.45tn won (£16.7bn).

While its semiconductor chip making business is far less lucrative, profit has remained relatively steady and is higher than Samsung’s consumer electronics division which makes TVs and digital appliances.

Samsung’s mobile business is again expected to experience a fall in profit when it announces its third quarter earnings tomorrow.  This fall, combined with growth in the semiconductor business, has caused some analysts to predict it could overtake mobile profit.

The overall chip making market has recovered from a lull and is forecast to grow by seven per cent this year according to Gartner. Applying this growth forecast to Samsung, its mobile profit would have to fall 27 per cent for this to happen, however.

By increasing its semiconductor production however, this is much more likely to happen- and more quickly.

Also more likely with the new billion-pound investment is Samsung becoming the largest chipmaker in the world, overtaking US-based rival Intel.

Intel has seen a slight decline in chip revenue due to its dominance in the declining PC market, while Samsung has seen a slight uptick.

Samsung said it expects to increase production capacity by a “low double digit percentage”, however it has yet to forecast revenue from this.

It is likely hoping its £10bn spend will pay off by boosting revenue by the 18bn needed to become number one- a significant step considering Intel's dominance at the top for 22 years in a row.

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