Samsung Electronics Sees Profit Drop for First Time Since 2023
Samsung Electronics reported a significant drop in operating profit due to US curbs on China-bound AI chips and issues with Nvidia. Revenue stood at 74 trillion won.

Samsung Electronics Co.'s profit fell for the first time since 2023, hurt by US curbs on China-bound AI chips and hiccups in plans to sell cutting-edge memory to Nvidia Corp. South Korea's largest company reported preliminary operating profit of 4.6 trillion won in the June quarter, a roughly 56% drop from a year ago. Analysts had projected a 41% decline. Revenue stood at 74 trillion won. One-time inventory-related costs contributed to the drop, and customer evaluation and shipments of its advanced memory products are proceeding, Samsung said in a statement. Operating losses in its contract chipmaking business are expected to narrow in the second half of the year on a gradual recovery in demand, Samsung said. The company will provide a full financial statement with net income and divisional breakdowns later this month. Samsung has been struggling to regain its footing in high-bandwidth memory chips, which are critical for powering Nvidia's AI accelerators. The company has yet to secure certification from Nvidia for its most advanced product — the 12-layer HBM3e — creating an unusually long lead time for rival SK Hynix Inc. Samsung secured an order from Advanced Micro Devices Inc., joining Micron as a supplier, according to a June release. But its failure to win early certification for HBM3e chips from Nvidia — the dominant maker of AI-supporting graphics processing units — is hurting its attempts to take significant market share. Bernstein analysts led by Mark Li, who had previously expected Samsung's 12-layer HBM3e would be qualified by Nvidia in the second quarter, trimmed their forecast for Samsung's HBM market share, saying they now expect certification in the third quarter. "Samsung will gradually narrow the gap vs rivals," they wrote in a June 23 research note. "We forecast SK Hynix remains the leader in 2027, but with others catching up and SK Hynix's edge eroding, the shares held by suppliers will be more similarly distributed then than now." Bernstein estimates SK Hynix holds 57% of the HBM market in 2025, followed by Samsung at 27% and Micron at 16%. At its annual shareholder meeting in March, Samsung vowed to strengthen its position in the HBM market this year, responding to concerns over its underperformance in AI. Jun Young-hyun, head of Samsung's chip business, said that Samsung's failure to secure an early lead in the HBM market contributed to it lagging behind rival SK Hynix and pledged not to repeat the mistake with HBM4. The next-generation memory is expected to be used in Nvidia's Rubin GPU architecture. "While uncertainties remain around the timeline for quality certification, we see no indication of a strategy shift and believe the company is on track for a 3Q2025 market launch," Daishin Securities Co. analyst Ryu Hyung-keun wrote in a recent research report. With assistance from Shinhye Kang. © 2025 Bloomberg L.P. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.