The profit warning came two days after the South Korean electronics giant slashed its operating profit for the third quarter by USD 2.3 billion.
After a recall problem with the large-sized Galaxy Note 7 turned into a full-blown crisis, Samsung announced earlier this week that it was scrapping the model entirely -- a devastating move for a company that prides itself on the quality production of cutting-edge technology.
It estimated an operating profit loss in the fourth quarter at around the "mid-2 trillion (USD 2.2 billion) won range" and 1.0 trillion won for the first quarter of 2017.
"Moving forward, Samsung Electronics plans to normalise its mobile business by expanding sales of flagship models such as the Galaxy S7 and Galaxy S7 edge," the company said in a statement.
Samsung announced a recall of 2.5 million units of the oversized Galaxy Note 7 smartphone in early September after several devices exploded or caught fire.
The company blamed faulty batteries made by an unnamed supplier -- widely believed to be its sister company Samsung SDI.
But numerous experts and analysts said the problem may have been with the handset's underlying technology, and Samsung's decision to rush the launch of the smartphone ahead of the latest iPhone from arch-rival Apple.
In its statement, Samsung vowed to "focus on enhancing product safety for consumers by making significant changes in its quality assurance processes".
Industry analysts have suggested the Note 7 fiasco could end up costing Samsung a great deal more, with major losses tied to the harder-to-calculate damage done to brand reputation.
"It will have to spend a lot of money to recover and much work has to be done.
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