
Samsung
South Korean conglomerate; world's largest memory chip manufacturer; AI capex supply chain beneficiary.
Last refreshed: 4 July 2026 · Appears in 2 active topics
Is Samsung the memory chip supplier best placed to profit from the AI infrastructure boom?
Timeline for Samsung
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Data Centres: Boom and BacklashIs Samsung a major supplier of AI chips and memory?
Why is Samsung mentioned in the context of Big Tech AI spending?
Background
Samsung Electronics is the world's largest producer of DRAM and NAND flash memory chips, and one of the two dominant manufacturers of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) alongside SK Hynix. In the context of Lowdown's AI jobs and power coverage, Samsung is referenced as a primary beneficiary of the record Big Tech AI capex cycle: Alphabet, Amazon, Microsoft, and Meta collectively committed over $300 billion in 2026 AI infrastructure spend, much of which flows through the memory and chip supply chain.
Founded in 1938 as a trading company, Samsung Electronics was established in 1969 and became the world's largest semiconductor company by revenue in 2017, overtaking Intel. The company is headquartered in Suwon, South Korea. Samsung operates an integrated device manufacturer (IDM) model, designing and fabricating its own chips, and also manufactures displays, smartphones (Galaxy series), and home appliances. Its semiconductor division, Samsung Semiconductor, competes with TSMC in contract chip fabrication and with SK Hynix in HBM supply to Nvidia.
Samsung's position in the AI supply chain is significant but contested: SK Hynix has been the preferred HBM supplier to Nvidia for its H100 and H200 accelerators, while Samsung has faced yield challenges with its HBM3E products. The AI capex wave represents a substantial revenue opportunity for Samsung's memory division if it can resolve those yield issues and qualify its products with Nvidia and other hyperscale chip buyers.
Samsung was separately named in the credential set behind the 2026 FortiBleed exposure: SOCRadar attributed the theft of 86,644 FortiGate device credentials, cracked offline by the Lynx/INC Ransom ransomware operation, to a haul that included Samsung-linked accounts. The exposure reflects credential hygiene risk across affected organisations rather than a confirmed breach of Samsung's own systems; its core identity remains its dominance in memory chip manufacturing.