Samsung's Profit Jumped 700%. Thank AI.
Samsung reported that first-quarter profit likely surged more than 700% year-over-year, driven by explosive demand for high-bandwidth memory chips used in AI training and inference systems. The number is staggering but follows a period when Samsung’s memory business was being undercut by inventory gluts and pricing pressure.
The reversal is a clean signal: the AI buildout has moved deep enough into the stack that it is now pulling on memory, not just logic chips. Nvidia gets most of the narrative oxygen when people talk about AI hardware, but the demand chain runs straight through DRAM and HBM suppliers. Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron are all beneficiaries of the same underlying dynamic.
This matters for understanding where the AI infrastructure story is heading. It is not a story about a few GPU vendors. It’s a story about a coordinated surge in demand across every layer of the chip stack — from leading-edge logic to packaging to memory — that is reshaping the economics of the entire semiconductor industry.
The question now is whether the demand is durable enough to justify the capacity expansions these companies are committing to. The HBM market has been wrong about timing before.