Nvidia Supplier's Parent Company Pledges $56B Investment In AI, Chip Tech By 2026 As Competition From Samsung, Micron Heats Up

South Korea’s SK Group, the parent company of Nvidia‘s chip supplier SK Hynix, has announced plans to amass 80 trillion won ($56 billion) by 2026. The funds will be primarily directed towards investments in artificial intelligence (AI) and semiconductors.

What Happened: The company’s top brass agreed during a weekend meeting that the funds, secured through improved profitability, business structure optimization, and synergy creation, would be invested in high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chips, data centers, and personalized AI assistant services. The strategy is designed to bolster its supply chains for emerging technology, Nikkei Asia reported on Monday.

The group’s chipmaking unit, SK Hynix, is projected to control over half the global market for HBM this year. The unit supplies nearly all HBM chips used by Nvidia NVDA, which utilizes them to boost the efficiency of its graphics processing units for AI computing and training.

However, Samsung Electronics and Micron are also vying for a significant share in the HBM market, posing potential competition for SK Hynix.

See Also: Palantir’s Peter Thiel Says It’s ‘Very Strange’ That Most Money In AI Is Being Made By Only One Company: ‘…Which Silicon Valley Doesn’t Even Know Much About Anymore’

Despite the looming competition, analysts opine that SK Hynix continues to lead in chip-stacking technology, a technique that amalgamates multiple conventional DRAM chips to enhance speed and facilitate large-scale data processing.

SK Group has yet to disclose detailed plans on how it aims to reach its 80-trillion-won target.

Why It Matters: In April, SK Hynix reported its first profitable quarter in five, attributing the turnaround to soaring demand for AI chips. The company’s strong performance was driven by increased sales of AI server products, particularly high-bandwidth memory, a technology crucial for AI chipsets used by Nvidia.

However, in June, Nvidia was in the final stages of certifying Samsung’s HBM chips, a critical step before Samsung could supply components crucial for training AI platforms. Nvidia’s approval is essential for companies like Samsung and Micron to compete with SK Hynix in the AI chip market.

Read Next: Apple Rejects Meta’s AI Integration Proposal, Ex-Employee Accuses iPhone-Maker Of Chemical Exposure And More: This Week In Appleverse

Image via SK Hynix

This story was generated using Benzinga Neuro and edited by Pooja Rajkumari

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