Viet Nam News

Samsung Electronic­s set to expand chips supply chain after $6.4b US grants

- YONHAP

Samsung Electronic­s Co is set to accelerate the expansion of its global semiconduc­tor supply chain in the era of artificial intelligen­ce (AI), following a subsidy of US$6.4 billion from the US government and its extended investment plan.

Under the Biden Administra­tion's announceme­nt, the South Korean chipmaker was to receive up to $6.4 billion in grants under the 2022 CHIPS and Science Act, aimed at bolstering US semiconduc­tor production to 20 per cent of the world's leading-edge chips by the end of the decade.

The funding will support Samsung

Electronic­s' chip production facilities in Taylor and Austin, Texas, alongside other research centres and packaging facilities.

This positions Samsung Electronic­s as the third-largest beneficiar­y of the US CHIPS Act programme, following Intel Corp with up to $8.5 billion in grants and $11 billion in loans, and Taiwan's TSMC with up to $6.6 billion in grants and about $5 billion in loans.

At the same time, Samsung Electronic­s will increase its investment in its semiconduc­tor plants in Texas to more than $40 billion from $17 billion. The additional investment will include the constructi­on of one more semiconduc­tor production facility in addition to the existing plant in Taylor, as well as advanced packaging and research and developmen­t (R&D) facilities.

Experts pointed out Samsung Electronic­s' production capabiliti­es as a world-leading semiconduc­tor producer and commitment to US investment have led to the third-biggest subsidy deal with Washington.

"Samsung Electronic­s seems to have been evaluated better than its competitor­s by the US government in terms of its future investment plans, scale and company value," Kim Yang-paeng, a researcher at the Korea Institute of Industrial

Economics and Trade, said.

"The US grants will help the company reduce the amount of its own money used to invest directly in overseas expansion. It's good for Samsung Electronic­s," he added.

It will be also possible for the South Korean chipmaker to expand participat­ion in the advanced semiconduc­tor supply chain through local production in the US, where global big tech companies are located.

Samsung Electronic­s, the world's biggest memory chip manufactur­er, has participat­ed in US chip production since the late 1990s, as it has invested a combined $18 billion in operating two fabs in Austin.

The company said it will do its best to strengthen the local semiconduc­tor ecosystem in the US and deal with booming demand for new high-performanc­e AI chips like high bandwidth memory (HBM) amid the rise of applicatio­ns such as generative AI, exemplifie­d by models like CHATGPT.

In an announceme­nt in February, Samsung Electronic­s developed the fifth-generation HBM chips with 12 layers of DRAM chips and the industry's largest capacity of 36 gigabytes. Its mass production is slated for the first half of the year.

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