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Samsung Offers Rebates to Customers Still Willing to Buy Its Phones

Samsung on Thursday offered financial incentives for customers in South Korea who exchange Galaxy Note 7 smartphones for other Samsung models.
An outdoor advertisement promoting Samsung Electronics' Galaxy Note 7 installed atop a building is seen in central Seoul
An outdoor advertisement, promoting Samsung Electronics' Galaxy Note 7, installed atop a building is seen in central Seoul, South Korea, October 11, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
/ Source: Reuters

Samsung on Thursday offered financial incentives for customers in South Korea who exchange Galaxy Note 7 smartphones for other Samsung models, as it scrambles to shore up its reputation in the wake of a damaging safety crisis.

Signage is seen at the Samsung 837 store in the Meatpacking District of Manhattan, New York, U.S.
Signage is seen at the Samsung 837 store in the Meatpacking District of Manhattan, New York, U.S., October 10, 2016. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly

The South Korean giant is in damage-control mode as rivals like Apple and LG try to steal market share from the global smartphone leader after it was forced to scrap its latest flagship device.

Samsung is boosting its marketing and promotional efforts around other Galaxy-series smartphones to cushion the blow from the demise of the premium Note 7, which it finally abandoned this week after failing to resolve overheating problems which caused some of the phones to ignite.

"Industry experience, such as the decline of Nokia and BlackBerry, shows how successful manufacturers can lose market share particularly quickly in the handset business," Fitch ratings agency said in a report.

In the United States, Samsung began sending fireproof boxes and protective gloves to customers returning potentially explosive Note 7s, drawing humorous barbs from social media commentators.

In its home market it started to offer refunds or exchanges for other products. Customers who returned their Note 7s, priced at about $880, were offered a coupon worth 30,000 won ($26.91), while those who chose an exchange for another high-end Samsung phone were promised an additional 70,000 won mobile credit.

The incentives would compensate consumers for their "big inconvenience," Samsung said in a statement.

On Wednesday the firm slashed its quarterly profit estimate by $2.3 billion to reflect the impact of the Note 7 withdrawal, giving some investors hope that the financial cost of the debacle had been largely accounted for.

"Samsung reflected most of the costs from the Note 7 in the Q3 earnings, reducing uncertainty about Q4 profit," analyst Jay Yoo at Korea Investment & Securities said.

But many analysts say the real risk to Samsung lies in the reputational damage it suffers in a cut-throat industry, which was harder to determine than financial costs.

"Potential long-term brand damage ... is a greater threat to its credit profile than the direct financial impact, which will be buffered by ample liquidity and a strong balance sheet," Fitch said.

Customers will have plenty of choice in the weeks ahead, with South Korean mobile carriers including SK Telecom planning to take pre-orders for Apple's iPhone 7 starting Friday. LG Electronics also recently launched its V20 smartphone.

Meanwhile South Korea's central bank said the Note 7 failure could undermine economic growth, although it needed more time to assess the effects.