- Samsung Q1 operating profit surges eightfold to 57.2tn won on AI memory demand
- HBM, DRAM demand intensifies as AI infrastructure investment accelerates
What happened
AI memory demand accelerates earnings recovery across chip sector
Samsung Electronics reported a sharp rise in profits as AI-related semiconductor demand surged. The company estimated first-quarter operating profit at 57.2 trillion won (US.9 billion), compared with 6.69 trillion won a year earlier, marking an eightfold increase and beating expectations.
Revenue is projected to reach around 133 trillion won, up roughly 68% year-on-year, as the memory market rebounds from a prolonged downturn.
The gains were driven by strong demand for high-bandwidth memory (HBM) and advanced DRAM used in AI training and data centre workloads. Hyperscale cloud providers expanding generative AI infrastructure have tightened supply and pushed up prices, with some memory segments seeing steep increases during the quarter.
Samsung’s semiconductor division led the recovery, benefiting from improved pricing and rising orders. The results reflect a broader upturn across the global memory industry after a period of oversupply and weak demand.
Also read: Huawei AI Chips Gain Traction as Orders Grow
Why it’s important
Samsung’s results highlight a structural shift in semiconductor demand, where AI workloads are becoming a primary growth engine rather than a cyclical boost. As cloud providers scale compute capacity, high-performance memory such as HBM is emerging as a critical bottleneck, increasing its strategic value across the supply chain.
This dynamic is reshaping pricing power and investment priorities, with chipmakers accelerating capacity expansion to capture AI-driven demand. It also signals that the industry may be entering a more sustained, compute-led upcycle, less dependent on traditional consumer electronics cycles.
The implications extend beyond Samsung, affecting global data centre economics, supply chain resilience and competition for advanced manufacturing. As AI adoption deepens, semiconductor performance and availability will increasingly define the pace of digital infrastructure growth.
Also read: Samsung bets on AI to power earnings growth
