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BOE Exits Galaxy S27 OLED Bid as Samsung Display Locks In All Flagship Models

By MinJeKim0 views
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BOE Exits Galaxy S27 OLED Bid as Samsung Display Locks In All Flagship Models

Samsung Electronics (005930.KS) will use panels exclusively from its own display subsidiary for all four Galaxy S27 models, after China's BOE Technology Group halted development of OLED screens for the next flagship lineup, multiple industry sources confirmed to ETNews and global tech trackers on June 29–30.

The collapse of the potential supply deal ends what would have been the first time a Chinese manufacturer supplied OLED panels for Samsung's premium Galaxy S-series — a product line that moves roughly 30 million units annually.

What Happened

BOE, the world's largest display panel maker by area, had been in discussions with Samsung Electronics to supply OLED screens for at least the base Galaxy S27 model at an estimated USD 5 discount per panel versus Samsung Display's pricing.

The arrangement unravelled after internal opposition from both camps within Samsung. Samsung Display — which accounts for the bulk of Samsung Electronics' component profit and holds a 44.6% share of the global small-to-medium OLED market — reportedly lobbied Samsung Electronics leadership to reject the Chinese supplier. Multiple Samsung Electronics executives were also against the move, sources said.

Samsung Electronics MX Division President Roh Tae-moon (TM Roh) visited BOE's facilities in China around June 25, but no positive signals for Galaxy S27 OLED deliveries emerged from the meeting. Industry watchers noted that Roh arrived without members of Samsung's phone development team — a signal the discussions had effectively stalled before the visit took place.

BOE subsequently halted Galaxy S27 OLED development internally, confirming the deal's collapse.

Market Context

BOE currently holds a 16.7% share of the small-to-medium OLED panel market and already supplies Samsung Electronics with OLED panels for lower-tier Galaxy A-series and budget models. Breaking into the flagship Galaxy S-series would have provided BOE with major supply credibility and, potentially, reduced Samsung's dependence on its captive display unit.

The failure mirrors BOE's earlier inability to break into Apple's iPhone OLED supply chain, where Samsung Display and LG Display retain the primary supplier roles.

Samsung Display's competitive moat in the S-series rests on display quality thresholds, strict supply-chain security requirements, and — as this episode shows — organizational resistance to ceding the parent company's flagship line to a direct rival.

Investor Implications

For Samsung Electronics shareholders, the outcome preserves the vertical integration that underpins Samsung Display's margins on flagship-grade OLED. Samsung Display is not a separately listed entity, but its earnings flow through Samsung Electronics' Device eXperience (DX) segment.

The consumer side carries a risk: without BOE's USD 5/panel discount, Samsung will have less headroom to absorb rising memory and Qualcomm Snapdragon component costs. Analysts have flagged the possibility of a modest price increase on the Galaxy S27 versus the Galaxy S26 as a result.

BOE is expected to continue pursuing supply relationships with other Android device makers and may focus its Galaxy-related ambitions on the mid-range A-series, where Samsung Electronics already sources a portion of panels externally.


Sources: ETNews (Korean) · GSMArena · Android Authority · SamMobile · WCCFTech

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