Samsung shares rise after Nvidia's Huang flags tie-up on new AI chips


A Samsung Electronics logo and a computer motherboard appear in this illustration taken August 25, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

March 17 (Reuters) - Shares of Samsung Electronics ⁠rose as much as 5% ‌on Tuesday after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said its new artificial intelligence chips were ​being manufactured by the ⁠South Korean company.

At ⁠Nvidia's GTC developer conference in California on ⁠Monday, ‌Huang unveiled Nvidia's new AI inference processor based on ⁠technology from chip startup Groq.

"I want ​to ‌thank Samsung who manufactures the Groq ⁠LP30 chip ​for us and they're cranking as hard as they can," he ⁠said, adding the chips were ​in production, and would be shipped in the second half of this ⁠year.

Samsung also showcased the Nvidia chips made using its 4-nanometer manufacturing process at the GTC.

Samsung shares were up ​3.9% at 196,000 ⁠won as of 0127 GMT, after ​earlier reaching 198,000 won, ‌while the broader market ​was up 2.4%.

(Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin; Editing by Himani Sarkar)

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