Although they are the bitterest of opponents, together they would be an unbeatable profit powerhouse. According to “value share” data provided to AppleInsider by Canaccord Genuity, Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Samsung (SSNLF.PK ) together made up 100 percent of the smartphone industry’s profits in the first calendar quarter of 2013. The manufacturers on Canaccord Genuity’s list are Apple, Samsung, LG, Nokia (NYSE:NOK), BlackBerry (NASDAQ:BBRY), Google’s (NASDAQ:GOOG) Motorola, Sony (NYSE:SNE), and HTC. Despite the big names, they were not all big earners, and Motorola actually lent value share to every other company, as its losses created a curve for the results. Is Apple now a once-in-a-decade buying opportunity? Click here to get your 24-page Ultimate Cheat Sheet to Apple’s Stock now! With $8.03 billion in operating income, Apple accounted for 57 percent of the total smartphone market’s profits. Samsung followed closely behind with about $6.02 billion, giving it a 43 percent share. Combined, that totals 100 percent of the profits, even though there were still 6 other companies. Motorola had an operating income loss of $179 million, giving it a negative- 1 percent value share. This made the extra headroom for Apple and Samsung to make up 100 percent of the value share even while other companies had positive results. Compared to Apple and Samsung, the other companies earned next to nothing. Nokia had an operating income of $5 million, BlackBerry beat that with $17 million, Sony topped that slightly with $19 million, and HTC had a very minimal $1 million operating income. All 4 companies had a value share of 0 percent.