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Samsung launches 108-megapixel image sensor

by Amwal Al Ghad English

Samsung introduced on Monday what it claimed to be the industry’s first 108-megapixel image sensor for smartphone cameras which have a picture resolution equivalent to a “high-end DSLR camera.”

The South Korean technology giant has gone through a rough time in China’s smartphone market in the last few years.

Faced with intense competition from local players like Huawei and Xiaomi, Samsung’s market share has dropped to 1 percent in one of the world’s largest smartphone markets.

But those same Chinese rivals — which have diminished Samsung’s standing in smartphones — may also be the company’s way back into China through components.

The sensor will be featured in an upcoming Xiaomi phone this year, and highlights Samsung’s strategy of winning market share in China’s handset industry through innovative smartphone parts. Xiaomi previously used Sony sensors.

Samsung has already scored other wins, including with Chinese consumer electronics firm, Oppo, which recently decided to use the South Korean firm’s image sensors.

“Samsung’s market share in China is just 1 percent. However, with its strong component business, it is gaining foothold in China,” Neil Shah, research director at Counterpoint Research, told CNBC.

With the help of OLED display technology and memory chips like Storage NAND and DRAM, “Samsung has grown significantly thanks to growth of Huawei, Oppo, Vivo, Xiaomi, Realme, and OnePlus,” Shah said. “Now it is rapidly increasing share of its other components … across Chinese players.”

Realme and OnePlus are other Chinese handset brands.

Targeting Chinese firms is a good strategy for growth because three of the world’s top five biggest smartphone players by market share are from China. In the domestic market, four of the top five players are Chinese. This can help Samsung gain ground in China.

It’s not just with image sensor technology that Samsung has had success with Chinese firms. Motorola, which is owned by China’s Lenovo, announced in May that its new phone would be using a Samsung processor.

The company needs to find new revenue streams amid weakness in the smartphone market and pricing of memory chips, one of its main profit drivers. These factors saw Samsung’s second quarter operating profit drop more than 55 percent year-on-year.

But Samsung noted in its second quarter earnings release that “demand was solid for 5G modems and high-resolution/big-pixel image sensors.”

5G refers to next-generation mobile networks that promise super-fast data speeds which can support new technologies like driverless cars. Samsung also developed a processor and modem, known as a system-on-chip (SoC), which could be another area of growth.

In the past few years, Samsung has signaled its commitment to the Chinese market through investments in new factories.

Last year, the company began building a second production line for memory chips at its factory in the Chinese city of Xi’an. Earlier this year, Samsung said that it would invest $116 billion in advanced processing chips through 2030 to diversify its business away from reliance on memory chips.

Shah said Chinese consumers want the latest technology in their devices and Samsung is looking to build that through its research and development efforts.

“Samsung is definitely ahead of the curve and pumping in lots of R&D to satisfy the growing demand for differentiated and advanced experiences for mature smartphone users in markets such as China,” Shah told CNBC. “But this time via its component business.”

Source: CNBC

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