- South Korea is orchestrating 1,350 trillion won ($880 billion) in investments from Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, Naver, and others into chip fabs and AI data centers — equivalent to roughly 5% of South Korea’s 2024 GDP — in what President Lee Jae Myung called a national survival imperative, hailing Samsung and SK Hynix leaders as “national heroes.”
- Samsung Group and SK Group will each build two new chipmaking plants in the country’s southwest for a combined 800 trillion won, while an additional 550 trillion won will fund 8.4 gigawatts of AI data-center capacity by 2029, led by Naver and other major Korean companies.
- Samsung Executive Chairman Jay Y. Lee called it “a race against time” — with Gwangju designated as a new memory hub, Cheonan and Onyang as HBM packaging centers, and humanoid robot deployment planned at Samsung’s Gumi fabs; SK Group boss Chey Tae-won has warned the global memory chip crunch may last several more years.
- Despite the headline investment figures, Samsung shares fell nearly 5% and SK Hynix fell 1.7% on the day, as investors weighed whether rapidly expanding supply into a demand-driven shortage risks accelerating the next price normalization cycle.
What Happened?
South Korea’s government unveiled a sweeping 1,350 trillion won ($880 billion) investment plan centered on Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, and internet giant Naver. Samsung Group and SK Group will each build two chipmaking facilities in the country’s southwest, totaling 800 trillion won; a further 550 trillion won funds 8.4 gigawatts of AI data-center capacity from multiple companies by 2029. President Lee Jae Myung promised government support — including water and power infrastructure — though specific policy incentives were not disclosed. Samsung Executive Chairman Jay Y. Lee detailed Gwangju as a new memory hub, Cheonan and Onyang for HBM packaging, and humanoid robot deployment at the Gumi fabs. Samsung has already committed over $70 billion for 2026 alone on capacity and R&D.
Why It Matters?
South Korea’s two dominant memory chipmakers supply the HBM chips that power AI data centers globally, and the current shortage has already forced Apple to raise Mac and iPad prices by up to $300 and Microsoft to hike Xbox prices for a third time. The $880 billion commitment — roughly 5% of South Korea’s GDP if sustained — signals the government’s determination to hold its memory lead as China ramps its own chip investments ($295 billion over five years) and the US CHIPS Act accelerates domestic production. The risk is that massive coordinated supply expansion converts today’s profitable shortage into tomorrow’s oversupply — a cycle Korean memory makers have navigated painfully before.
What’s Next?
Citigroup says the Korean government-led investment should boost the country’s semiconductor supply chain and chipmaking equipment sector. The geopolitical rationale is self-reinforcing: the US, China, Japan, and now Korea are all treating chip capacity as a national security imperative, making the subsidy arms race self-perpetuating. President Lee’s political calculus also shapes the geography — investments are deliberately spread outside Seoul to generate high-paying regional jobs as his approval rating has slid to its lowest level since taking office. Whether memory chip demand growth stays ahead of this coordinated supply surge will determine whether the investment pays off or triggers the next down-cycle.
Source: Bloomberg













