TLDR
- LG Electronics expects Q1 operating profit of 1.674 trillion won (~$1.1B), up 33% year-on-year
- Q1 revenue hit a record 23.73 trillion won, up 4.4%
- Results beat analyst consensus of 1.336 trillion won
- Home appliance, TV, and vehicle component divisions all contributed to the rebound
- The stock was down about 2.1% on the day despite the strong numbers
LG Electronics posted a sharp earnings rebound in Q1 2026, reversing an operating loss from the prior quarter. The results beat expectations — yet the stock still slipped.
LG Electronics on Tuesday provided its earnings guidance for the first quarter of this year, predicting 1.67 trillion won ($1.1 billion) in operating profit and 23.73 trillion won in sales.https://t.co/wdyw5xd02b
— The Korea Times (@koreatimescokr) April 7, 2026
The company guided for operating profit of 1.674 trillion won for the January-March period. That’s a 33% jump from the same quarter a year ago and a full reversal from the 109 billion won operating loss posted in Q4 2025.
Analysts had pencilled in 1.336 trillion won. LG cleared that by a wide margin.

Revenue came in at a record 23.733 trillion won for a first quarter, up 4.4% year-on-year. LG said the improvement was driven by early moves to get ahead of potential tariff risks, alongside cost-cutting across the business.
The home appliance division remained a core driver. Strong product demand across both premium and mass-market segments held up well, with growth in online sales and subscription services adding to the mix.
LG’s TV business, part of its media and entertainment segment, returned to profit in Q1. The company had exited unprofitable assembly lines and cut headcount, and those moves appear to be paying off.
Vehicle Components and Cost Discipline Drive Margins
The vehicle solutions segment posted steady growth, supported by a solid order backlog and better margins. Favorable foreign exchange conditions also helped.
HSBC analyst Ricky Seo noted that infotainment and e-powertrain shipments held firm in Q1. A potential return to profit at LG’s flat-panel affiliate likely gave earnings an additional lift, he said.
Kangho Park of Daishin Securities said the TV unit could turn profitable this year after the workforce streamlining. He also flagged that higher local production in the U.S. and Mexico should help the home appliance business manage tariff exposure going forward.
The HVAC division was the one weak spot. Revenue and profit dropped there, hurt by geopolitical uncertainty — particularly in the Middle East. LG said it plans to redirect focus toward heat pumps and cooling solutions for AI data centers.
Nomura analyst Eon Hwang expects a growing slice of LG’s revenue to shift toward newer streams — appliance subscriptions, web-based platform services, and HVAC.
Moody’s Upgrade Adds to Recovery Story
Earlier this year, Moody’s upgraded LG’s credit rating to Baa1 from Baa2. The agency cited lower debt levels, an expected earnings recovery, and investment in new business lines.
LG’s Seoul-listed stock had already climbed nearly 20% in 2026 through Monday, reflecting investor optimism about a full-year earnings comeback.
The preliminary Q1 figures are still subject to revision. LG is scheduled to release its full quarterly results later this month.







