Samsung Elec and AMD sign MoU on AI memory, explore foundry partnership


FILE PHOTO: An AMD logo and a computer motherboard appear in this illustration created on August 25, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

SEOUL, March 18 (Reuters) - Samsung ⁠Electronics and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) signed a memorandum of understanding to ⁠expand their strategic partnership on memory chip supplies for artificial ‌intelligence infrastructure, the companies said on Wednesday.

The agreement will focus on supplying Samsung's next-generation high-bandwidth memory (HBM4) for AMD's upcoming Instinct MI455X AI accelerators, as well as optimised DDR5 memory ​for AMD's sixth-generation EPYC processors, they said in ⁠a statement.

The companies will also ⁠discuss opportunities for a foundry partnership, under which Samsung could provide contract ⁠chip ‌manufacturing services for next-generation AMD products.

Under the agreement, Samsung will position itself as a key HBM4 supplier for AMD's next-generation AI ⁠GPUs. The South Korean firm has already been a ​primary HBM supplier ‌for AMD, supplying HBM3E chips used in AMD's MI350X and MI355X ⁠accelerators.

The agreement comes ​during the week of Nvidia's annual developer conference GTC, where CEO Jensen Huang on Monday announced a foundry partnership with the Korean firm and praised its ⁠HBM4 chips.

The tie-up highlights a broader race ​among global chipmakers to lock in long-term supply partnerships for advanced memory, as AI-driven demand reshapes the semiconductor industry and tightens supply of HBM chips.

Last ⁠month, AMD said it had agreed to sell up to $60 billion worth of AI chips to Meta Platforms over five years, a deal that allows the Facebook owner to purchase as much as 10% of the chips. ​AMD signed a similar deal with OpenAI ⁠last year.

Samsung, the world's largest memory chipmaker, has been seeking to narrow the ​gap with rivals in the fast-growing HBM ‌segment. It holds about a 22% share ​of the global HBM market, compared with market leader SK Hynix's 57%, according to Counterpoint.

(Reporting by Heekyong YangEditing by Ed Davies)

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