Tech

Samsung Electronics crosses $1tn, joining TSMC, as the AI memory cycle pulls Korea into a record

South Korea's tech sector surges past $1 trillion in market value, with Samsung Electronics and TSMC-like peer driving a record-breaking rally fueled by the AI-driven memory supercycle, as the KOSPI index breaks 7,000 for the first time and two chipmakers now account for 42% of the index. This milestone marks a pivotal moment in the country's tech boom, with Samsung's stock quadrupling in a year and forecasts suggesting the peak is still ahead. The AI memory cycle continues to propel Korea's tech dominance.

Samsung Electronics' market capitalisation crossed $1tn for the first time in the company's 57-year history, with shares trading up roughly 12 percent in early dealings before closing higher. The KOSPI, South Korea's benchmark index, broke 7,000 for the first time on the same trading session, hitting an intraday high of 7,338.61. Two Korean chipmakers now account for 42 percent of the index.

The numbers behind the milestone

Samsung's stock has more than quadrupled over the past 12 months. The company now joins TSMC as the only other Asian operator to cross the $1tn threshold. TSMC has since extended its lead substantially, currently trading at roughly $2tn in market capitalisation.

The Q1 2026 earnings result delivered last week provides the immediate context. Samsung's revenue for the quarter reached ₩133.9 trillion (about $90bn), with operating profit of ₩57.2 trillion — an eightfold year-on-year increase and the highest quarterly profit in the company's history. The semiconductor division alone produced ₩53.7 trillion in operating profit, roughly 94 percent of the total. The growth was almost entirely attributable to high-bandwidth memory (HBM) and tightly priced server-grade DRAM.

Supply outlook and pricing power

The second piece of news driving the rally is the supply outlook Samsung has been signalling consistently. Tom's Hardware reported in late April on Samsung's and SK Hynix's joint warning that AI-driven memory shortages are expected to persist through 2027 and beyond, with customers already booking supply years ahead and the wider DRAM market tightening alongside HBM.

Samsung's chief financial officer told analysts that the demand-fulfilment rate is now at a record low, with customers actively bringing forward 2027 demand into 2026 to lock in supply. The company is guiding to a tighter supply-demand balance in 2027 than in 2026, not a looser one. That guidance is unusual — most cyclical-industry CFOs, after a year in which their stock has quadrupled, soften forward signals to manage expectations. Samsung's commentary has done the opposite.

Structural implications

Three things follow from this milestone that go beyond the Samsung headline.

First, the structural validation of the AI memory supercycle. Investors have been debating since late 2024 whether HBM demand would persist at the rate analyst models implied or moderate as customers' procurement plans normalised. The Samsung milestone, on top of SK Hynix's parallel rally, suggests the market has decided in favour of the persistence thesis.

Second, what it implies for broader infrastructure economics. The same week that Samsung crossed $

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