TODAY’S PAPER | October 14, 2025 | EPAPER

Samsung's highest Q3 profit in years, AI demand lifts chip prices

Samsung Electronics to post its highest third-quarter profit since 2022, driven by higher memory chip prices


Reuters October 14, 2025 2 min read
Samsung's highest Q3 profit in years, AI demand lifts chip prices

Samsung Electronics is expected to post its highest third-quarter profit since 2022, driven by higher memory chip prices supported by server demand as customers rebuild inventories, analysts' estimates showed.

The world's biggest maker of memory chips is projected to report an operating profit of 10.1 trillion won ($7.11 billion) for the July-September period, according to LSEG SmartEstimate from 31 analysts, which is weighted toward those who are more consistently accurate. This would be up 10% from a year earlier.

Analysts attributed the recovery mainly to better conventional memory chip pricing, which would offset weaker sales volumes of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chips, as Samsung has yet to supply its latest HBM products to Nvidia.

HBM chips, critical for artificial intelligence (AI) development, are designed to reduce power consumption and process large datasets by stacking chips vertically.

Analysts said demand for memory chips, particularly from hyperscalers and AI-related investments for services such as ChatGPT, has put more workload on general servers, thus boosting conventional memory chip prices.

Prices of some DRAM chips, widely used in servers, smartphones, and PCs, jumped 171.8% in the third quarter from a year earlier, according to TrendForce data.

While Samsung's conventional memory business performed well, analysts said delays in supplying its latest 12-layer HBM3E chips to Nvidia have hurt its profit and share price.

Rivals SK Hynix and Micron have gained more from AI-driven demand, while Samsung's exposure to China, where advanced chip sales are restricted by the United States, has constrained its growth.

Analysts said market sentiment toward Samsung's shares and chip business, including both memory and contract chip manufacturing, is expected to improve as it secures supply deals with major customers such as OpenAI and Tesla.

Samsung shares have risen more than 43% following its announcement of a chip supply deal with Tesla in July.

During OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's visit to South Korea earlier this month, Samsung, SK Hynix, and OpenAI announced partnerships to supply advanced memory chips to the Stargate project.

The AI chip deal between OpenAI and AMD, one of Samsung's major HBM customers, would also benefit Samsung, said Ryu Young-ho, a senior analyst at NH Investment & Securities.

Ryu added that Samsung's $16.5 billion foundry deal with Tesla has lifted expectations that Samsung's struggling contract chip manufacturing business could win more orders from major tech firms if the company delivers the project as planned.

While recent AI-driven supply deals signal a positive outlook for Samsung, analysts cautioned that uncertainties remain, including potential US tariffs on chips and China's tightened export controls on rare earth materials used in advanced chips and manufacturing equipment.

In September, Micron said it expects to sell out all of its HBM chips for calendar year 2026 in the coming months due to strong demand.

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