(LEAD) Samsung heir visits chip factory in China amid virus recovery
(ATTN: CHANGES lead, photo; ADDS more info in paras 4, 6, 8-12)
By Joo Kyung-don
SEOUL, May 18 (Yonhap) -- Samsung Electronics Vice Chairman Lee Jae-yong on Monday visited the company's chip factory in China to assess its business plans to overcome the virus crisis amid the reopening of the world's No. 2 economy.
Lee, the de facto leader of South Korea's top conglomerate, inspected Samsung Electronics' chip plant in Xian, some 1,000 kilometers southwest of Beijing, and encouraged workers there trying to overcome the fallout from the pandemic.
"To secure new growth engines, we need to be preemptive and be prepared for forthcoming changes," Lee said in comments provided by the company. "We have no time, and we cannot lose this moment."
This is Lee's first overseas business trip since January, when he visited Brazil before the novel coronavirus became a global problem. Lee previously visited the Xian plant in February last year.
South Korea and China began to operate a fast-track entry system this month, which exempts business travelers from 14-day mandatory isolation, in a move to help minimize the fallout from entry curbs prompted by the novel coronavirus pandemic.
Lee, the only son of bedridden Samsung chief Lee Kun-hee, reportedly received a virus test upon his entry to China, where COVID-19 first emerged late last year, according to sources.
The Xian plant is Samsung's only foreign memory chip factory. The South Korean tech giant last year revealed it will invest an additional US$8 billion in the plant and sent some 200 engineers last month for the expansion of the second Xian plant.
The chip industry faces growing uncertainties over a renewed trade row between Washington and Beijing, even though many countries around the globe have started to reopen their economies and lift virus lockdowns.
Lee's visit came amid concerns that Samsung Electronics may come under pressure from the United States to join its move to cut off China's Huawei Technologies Co. from global suppliers.
The U.S. Commerce Department on Friday said that foreign chip manufacturers using American chipmaking equipment and software will have to apply for a license before shipping chips to Huawei.
Samsung delivered a solid earnings performance in the first quarter on the back of its chip business, with its operating income increasing 3.43 percent on-year to 6.4 trillion won (US$5.1 billion) and sales rising 5.61 percent on-year to 55.3 trillion won over the cited period.
The company previously expected that memory demand would remain robust with the rising work-at-home culture, but its overall second-quarter performance may not be impressive, as the pandemic will significantly affect demand for some of its key products, including smartphones.
kdon@yna.co.kr
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