Kia confirms Q1 profit miss vs. expectations on US tariffs, weak won

Kia Corp. confirmed a 23.5% drop in first-quarter net profit to 1.83 trillion won ($1.2 billion), missing analyst estimates of 1.91 trillion won, due to US import tariffs and a weakening Korean won—issues flagged in pre-earnings forecasts. Sales still hit a record 29.5 trillion won amid 5.3% growth.

Kia Corp., South Korea's second-largest automaker, reported Q1 net profit down 23.5% to 1.83 trillion won from 2.39 trillion won a year ago, per its April 24 regulatory filing. This fell short of analyst expectations compiled prior to the release (1.91 trillion won average). Operating profit dropped 26.7% to 2.2 trillion won, steeper than the forecasted 22.6% decline to 2.32 trillion won, while sales rose 5.3% to a record 29.5 trillion won (vs. expected 29.62 trillion won).

Kia attributed the shortfall to US import tariffs costing 755 billion won—fully impacting the quarter—and currency headwinds from a weaker Korean won, echoing concerns raised in market previews for Hyundai and Kia earnings.

Global vehicle sales were 779,000 units, up 0.9% year-on-year and aligning with preliminary data (779,169 units), including 141,000 in Korea and 638,000 overseas. Eco-friendly vehicles made up 232,000 units (29.7% of total), up from 23.1% last year.

"Despite short-term costs like US tariffs, we are expanding global market share and pursuing qualitative growth via eco-friendly vehicles," a company official said. "We will sustain profitability by improving sales mix toward high-value-added models and cutting costs."

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Samsung Electronics forecasts record Q1 operating profit of 57.2 trillion won

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Samsung Electronics estimated a record first-quarter operating profit of 57.2 trillion won ($37.9 billion) on Tuesday, driven by surging demand for AI chips. The figure marks a 755 percent increase from a year earlier, with sales reaching 133 trillion won for the first time exceeding 100 trillion won. The results surpassed analysts' expectations amid a booming AI sector.

Hyundai Motor and Kia are expected to report lackluster first-quarter earnings compared to last year due to US tariffs and a weaker Korean won. A market analysis of securities firms' forecasts shows Hyundai projecting sales of 45.89 trillion won and operating profit of 2.78 trillion won. Kia anticipates sales of 29.62 trillion won with operating profit down 22.6%.

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