Top Picks
-
Samsung enjoys galactically good sales
YouTube 10mo ago
-
The Doors - Light My Fire
Top Picks 1h ago
-
RuPaul's Runway looks from every season of RuPaul's Drag Race
Top Picks 2h ago
-
Reggie Watts - Socio-musicology Experiment Episode 1
Top Picks 3h ago
-
Sarah Silverman's Perfect Night featuring Will.i.am-- YouTube Comedy Week
Top Picks 4h ago
-
She & Him- I Could've Been Your Girl
Top Picks 7h ago
-
SoundWorks Collection - The Music of Star Trek Into Darkness
Top Picks 8h ago
-
GIZMODO - Robotic Bartender at Google I/O
Top Picks 9h ago
-
Alien - Chestburster Scene - Homemade with BlackNerdComedy (comparison)
Top Picks 10h ago
-
Star Wars Filibuster - Animation
Top Picks 11h ago
-
Reggie Watts -- Reggie Rolled - YouTube Comedy Week
Top Picks 12h ago
-
Jiu Jitsu - Triangle Choke Proposal
Top Picks 12h ago
-
Honest Trailers - Fast Five
Top Picks 12h ago
-
Quadruple X-Flaring Sunspot Is At It Again | Video
Top Picks 13h ago
-
Just like a Woman TRAILER 1 (2013) - Sienna Miller Movie HD
Top Picks 13h ago
-
Spiderman filming in chinatown manhattan. Took a break to play basketball with loca kids. 5-18-13
Top Picks 14h ago
Tags
Description
http://www.euronews.com/ Soaring sales of its Galaxy smartphone drove Samsung's quarterly profit to a record. The South Korean technology giant made the equivalent of 4.76 billion euros. That was despite Europe's debt crisis denting demand in its biggest market for televisions and home appliances and a parts shortage that meant it couldn't build as many of the new popular Galaxy S III model as it wanted. Sales of the flagship Galaxy smartphones are likely to have stretched Samsung's lead over rivals Apple and Nokia. While strong handset sales grab the headlines, more than doubling profit growth, other businesses such as chips and consumer electronics are having to cope with lowered prices and demand. The weak euro is also eating away at the profits Samsung brings back into South Korea. In a sign that the eurozone crisis is occupying minds in boardrooms around the globe, Samsung executives said this week the group was operating to a contingency plan. "Europe is our biggest consumer electronics market and we may have to initiate cost cuts and product price increases should the euro fall further from the current level," said one executive who didn't want to be named as the plan is internal. "Our smartphones are flying off the shelves, with some outlets reporting 40-60 percent sales growth, but that's distorting the overall trading outlook which is more challenging due to the weak global economy and a weak euro." The euro has fallen around five percent against the Korean won since April, and about eight percent in the past year, to two-year lows. Find us on: Youtube http://bit.ly/zr3upY Facebook http://www.facebook.com/euronews.fans Twitter http://twitter.com/euronews
