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Samsung forecasts best profit in three years amid AI-driven chip boom

Samsung Electronics said it expects its largest quarterly profit since 2022, as a global surge in demand for AI and memory chips pushes prices higher and tightens supply. The South Korean tech giant estimated an operating profit of 12.1 trillion won ($8.5 billion) for the July–September quarter, up 32% year-on-year and well above the 10.1 trillion won expected by analysts. This marks Samsung’s best performance in 13 quarters.

Analysts said the surprise earnings were powered by strong demand for commodity memory chips, used in data centre servers, which offset slower-than-expected progress in the company’s high bandwidth memory (HBM) chip sales to Nvidia. Despite slipping 0.5% in morning trade after an early rally, Samsung’s stock has risen around 75% this year, reflecting investor confidence in its chip rebound.

Experts noted that reduced inventories and stronger DRAM and NAND prices have given Samsung an edge. “Samsung is a big beneficiary of growing demand for commodity chips,” said Sohn In-joon from Heungkuk Securities. Meanwhile, narrower losses at its foundry unit helped ease cost pressures.

The company also expects revenue to hit a record 86 trillion won, up 8.7% year-on-year, aided by a weaker won. However, analysts warned that trade tensions between the U.S. and China, potential U.S. tariffs, and China’s export controls on rare earth materials could cloud future performance.

Samsung plans to release full quarterly results on October 30 and has reportedly introduced a stock-based incentive plan for all South Korean employees to align performance with company growth.

Samsung Ordered to Pay $445.5 Million in U.S. Patent Verdict Over Wireless Technology

A federal jury in Marshall, Texas, has ruled that Samsung Electronics must pay nearly $445.5 million in damages to Collision Communications for infringing on patents tied to 4G, 5G, and Wi-Fi technologies.

The jury determined that several Samsung products — including its Galaxy smartphones, laptops, and other wireless-enabled devices — violated four patents held by the New Hampshire-based firm. The verdict marks yet another major legal setback for Samsung in the same Texas court, which has issued multiple high-value patent rulings against the company in recent years.

Collision Communications filed its lawsuit in 2023, alleging Samsung used patented innovations designed to improve wireless network efficiency. The company said the technology originated from research done by defense contractor BAE Systems, though BAE was not involved in the case.

Samsung denied the infringement claims and argued the patents were invalid. Neither company’s representatives immediately commented on the verdict.

Marshall, Texas, has become a notable hotspot for high-stakes intellectual property litigation, drawing some of the world’s biggest tech firms into multimillion-dollar disputes.

Global companies pour billions into AI infrastructure with mega-deals

A wave of multi-billion dollar investments is reshaping the AI landscape as chipmakers, cloud providers, and tech giants race to secure computing power for next-generation artificial intelligence. The surge follows OpenAI’s launch of ChatGPT in 2022, which sparked unprecedented demand for GPUs, cloud infrastructure, and data centers.

Key deals fueling the AI boom:

  • Nvidia & OpenAI – Nvidia to invest up to $100B in OpenAI and supply advanced AI chips, cementing its dominance in the AI ecosystem.

  • Nvidia & Intel – Nvidia invests $5B for a ~4% stake in Intel.

  • Oracle & Meta – In talks on a $20B cloud deal to boost Meta’s AI compute.

  • Oracle & OpenAI – Landmark deal worth $300B over five years for OpenAI to buy Oracle cloud capacity.

  • CoreWeave & Nvidia$6.3B order ensuring Nvidia-backed startup CoreWeave absorbs unused cloud demand.

  • Nebius Group & Microsoft$17.4B, five-year GPU deal to bolster Microsoft’s infrastructure.

  • Meta & Google – Six-year, $10B cloud agreement signed in August.

  • Intel & SoftBank – SoftBank injects $2B into Intel, becoming a top-10 shareholder.

  • Tesla & Samsung$16.5B chip supply deal for Tesla’s next-gen AI6 chip, produced in Texas.

  • Meta & Scale AI – Meta takes 49% stake ($14.3B) in Scale AI, elevating CEO Alexandr Wang’s role in Meta’s AI strategy.

  • Google & Windsurf$2.4B licensing deal for AI code generation tech.

  • CoreWeave & OpenAI$11.9B, five-year contract signed before CoreWeave’s IPO.

  • Stargate Datacenter Project – Joint venture by SoftBank, OpenAI, Oracle, backed by U.S. President Donald Trump, with up to $500B in AI infrastructure funding.

  • Amazon & Anthropic – Amazon doubles down with a total $4B investment in Anthropic, developer of the Claude chatbot.

Why it matters:

  • Capital intensity: AI development is now measured in hundreds of billions, with infrastructure demands rivaling traditional energy projects.

  • Strategic alliances: Tech giants are securing long-term chip and cloud capacity to avoid bottlenecks.

  • Geopolitical edge: Governments, particularly the U.S., are encouraging private-public mega-projects like Stargate to keep ahead in the AI race.

The investment frenzy highlights a simple truth: the future of AI hinges not just on algorithms, but on who controls the world’s computing power.