Samsung shares hit a three-year high on Friday after the South Korean tech giant forecast a 15-fold increase in its second quarter operating profit from the same time last year, as the global artificial intelligence boom buoys demand for advanced computer chips.
Samsung has not released much information on its expected second quarter takings but the impressive forecasts are most likely down to strong performance in its semiconductor unit. Samsung is one of the world’s largest computer chip manufacturers and booming demand for artificial intelligence has sent prices for chips skyrocketing, particularly high-end chips that can be used to power AI products and data centers. Samsung itself has attributed its expected growth this year to broader AI optimism, and in particular interest in generative artificial intelligence, or the kind of AI powering tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude and Copilot. As well as helping Samsung recover from a tough COVID-19 pandemic slump, the AI boom has propelled other chip and AI companies to stratospheric heights. Notable among these is U.S. chipmaker Nvidia, which has rapidly grown from a relatively niche maker of hardware primarily used by gamers to one of the world’s most valuable companies with a market capitalization of more than $3 trillion. Nvidia was briefly the world’s most valuable public company by market capitalization, though it is now the third most valuable behind Microsoft and Apple.
Samsung is due to release a more detailed earnings report for its second quarter at the end of July.