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Samsung Exits China TV and Home Appliance Sales After 34 Years

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Samsung Exits China TV and Home Appliance Sales After 34 Years

TL;DR - Samsung Electronics has formally decided to halt television and home appliance sales in mainland China, ending a 34-year direct retail presence, per Yonhap News Agency and The Korea Times. - Samsung's China sales arm posted ₩168 billion ($116 million) in net profit in 2025, sharply lower than ₩300 billion ($207 million) the prior year, Korea Times reported, citing industry sources. - Mobile, semiconductor and medical-device businesses will continue, while the Suzhou plant is expected to remain as an export base, per Seoul Economic Daily and China Daily.

Lead Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), the world's largest television maker by shipments per The Korea Times, has formally decided to wind down home appliance and TV sales in mainland China, multiple Korean outlets reported on May 6, 2026. The move ends a 34-year direct retail presence that began with Seoul-Beijing diplomatic normalization in 1992 and once made China one of Samsung's flagship overseas markets.

What Happened

Samsung notified its Chinese distribution vendors that it will stop selling televisions and home appliances in the country, according to Yonhap News Agency (South Korea's main wire service), with confirmation reported by The Korea Times and Maeil Business Newspaper (MK Economy, a major Korean business daily). Mobile devices, semiconductors and medical-equipment operations will remain in place, the same outlets said. MK Economy framed the decision as a "selection and concentration" reorganization aimed at freeing resources for higher-margin businesses.

Earlier in the same week, Samsung replaced the head of its TV division "to tackle increasing challenges at home and abroad," Korea Times reported. The outlet also noted that Samsung had previously disclosed it was reviewing a broader business reorganization in light of intensifying home appliance competition and tariff risks.

Why It Matters

The withdrawal is the first concrete signal that Samsung is prepared to retreat from a flagship consumer market when scale advantages no longer translate into profit, rather than defending share at any cost. For an electronics conglomerate that long treated China as a must-win battlefield, the exit represents a structural shift in posture — from global breadth toward selective profitability. It also crystallizes a pattern Korean media has tracked for years: that Chinese consumer-electronics nationalism, accelerated since the 2017 THAAD missile-defense dispute, has hollowed foreign-brand share to the point where remaining is uneconomic, according to Seoul Economic Daily.

Business Impact

Korea Times, citing industry sources, reported that Samsung's China sales unit booked net profit of ₩168 billion ($116 million) in 2025, sharply down from ₩300 billion ($207 million) the year before — a roughly 44% year-on-year decline. China Daily reported that Samsung plans to retain its Chinese manufacturing footprint as an export-oriented production base while pivoting to "high-value-added businesses like AI smartphones and semiconductors." Samsung's Suzhou production subsidiary, established in 1995 per Seoul Economic Daily, is expected to continue in that role.

Samsung said after-sales services, including installation, return and maintenance, will continue to be provided to existing customers in accordance with China's relevant laws on protection of consumer rights and interests, according to Global Times. Nikkei Asia separately reported that Samsung intends to redeploy resources toward its U.S. consumer-electronics business, where competitive dynamics are more favorable to the company.

Industry & Historical Context

Samsung entered China in 1992 and began mass-producing color televisions at a Tianjin plant in 1994, followed by the Suzhou subsidiary in 1995, Seoul Economic Daily reported. The same outlet said the Korean group led China's TV market in 2006 with roughly 3 million Bordeaux LCD units annually and held leadership into the early 2010s with ultra-high-definition models. The Tianjin TV factory was closed in 2020, per Seoul Economic Daily.

The competitive picture has since inverted. In 2025, domestic brands Hisense, TCL and Xiaomi together held 94.1% of China's TV market, while foreign companies including Samsung, Sony, Philips and Sharp shipped a combined 1 million units — about 3% of the market — according to Seoul Economic Daily. China Daily, citing industry data, said total Chinese TV shipments reached 32.89 million units in 2025. In home appliances, Midea, Haier and Gree together command more than 62% of the market, China Daily reported, with the country's home appliance retail market (excluding 3C products) totaling 893.1 billion yuan in 2025 by the same source.

What to Watch

  • Reorganization follow-through: Whether the new TV division head, installed earlier this week per Korea Times, drives further structural changes such as plant repurposing or workforce moves at Suzhou.
  • U.S. pivot: Concrete capacity, marketing or distribution commitments in North America would substantiate the thesis Nikkei Asia reported.
  • Disclosure on financial impact: Any subsequent filing via DART (Korea's electronic disclosure system) on charges or write-downs tied to the China retail exit would clarify cost.
  • Korean peer response: LG Electronics, the other major Korean home appliance maker, has not announced a comparable retreat in coverage reviewed for this article; sustained foreign-brand erosion in China would test its strategy as well.

Sources: - The Korea Times (Yonhap) — https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/business/companies/20260506/samsung-withdraws-home-appliance-tv-sales-biz-in-china - MK Economy — https://www.mk.co.kr/news/business/12038003 - Yonhap News (Industry) — https://www.yna.co.kr/view/AKR20260506170600003 - Seoul Economic Daily — https://en.sedaily.com/markets/2026/05/06/samsung-exits-china-tv-and-home-appliance-market-after-34 - China Daily — https://global.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202604/28/WS69f0b8d3a310d6866eb46090.html - Nikkei Asia — https://asia.nikkei.com/business/electronics/samsung-eyes-exit-from-china-tv-appliance-sales-to-focus-on-us - Global Times — https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202605/1360436.shtml

By LineVest Markets Desk — 2026-05-06 This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

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