
Samsung profit surges 19-fold on AI boom, but Asian markets retreat
Record operating profit of $58 billion fails to halt a tech sell-off as investors question lofty valuations and the yen hovers near multi-decade lows.
Samsung Electronics estimated its April–June operating profit at 89.4 trillion won ($58 billion), a 1,810% surge from a year earlier and its third consecutive record quarter, as the global race to build artificial-intelligence infrastructure drove insatiable demand for high-bandwidth memory chips. Revenue jumped 129% to 171 trillion won, the company said in preliminary guidance. Yet the results failed to lift sentiment: Samsung shares fell as much as 7% in Seoul, dragging the Kospi index down more than 5%, as investors locked in profits after a rally that had more than doubled the benchmark this year before a 20% correction from its June peak.
The supply-demand imbalance in advanced memory has handed South Korean chipmakers extraordinary pricing power. DRAM average selling prices rose more than 40% quarter-on-quarter and NAND prices climbed over 50%, according to HSBC analysts. With production capacity still constrained, analysts in Seoul and London expect the shortage to persist at least until 2027, supporting earnings. Some market participants in Tokyo and Singapore caution that any delay in AI data-centre projects could puncture the boom, though Counterpoint Research analysts in Seoul see no evidence yet of a broad slowdown in AI infrastructure investment.
The sell-off rippled across the region. Japan’s Nikkei shed more than 1%, pressured by technology losses and a yen that hovered near 162 per dollar, its weakest level in decades. The currency’s slide has kept Tokyo on alert for intervention, and MUFG Bank analysts warned that a weak 30-year government bond auction on Tuesday could accelerate yen selling. The dollar index edged up, while the euro was little changed. Oil prices inched higher, with Brent near $72 a barrel, as traders monitored tensions involving Iran and shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, though prices remained well below the peaks of this year’s Middle East conflict. Gold eased to around $4,144 an ounce.
Investors now turn to the release of Federal Open Market Committee minutes on Wednesday, the first under new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, for signals on the US interest-rate trajectory. Samsung’s final earnings report, due at the end of the month, will provide divisional breakdowns and net profit, offering a clearer view of the semiconductor cycle’s durability.
| Atlantic / Anglosphere press | +1.00 | aligned |
|---|---|---|
| Indian & South Asian press | −0.50 | critical |
| Japanese-Korean press | −0.30 | critical |
| Southeast Asian press | 0.00 | neutral |
Samsung celebrates its third straight record profit, powered by the AI boom. The company's earnings surge proves the unstoppable momentum of artificial intelligence.
By isolating the profit figure and omitting the market decline, the narrative creates a pure success story. The AI demand is presented as an unstoppable force.
The bloc omits that Samsung's shares fell over 5% on the same day, and that Asian markets broadly declined.
Markets punish Samsung even after a 19-fold profit jump, signaling that the AI rally has peaked. Investors are cashing out amid oversupply fears.
By juxtaposing the profit surge with the stock decline, the narrative implies that the market sees through the hype. The focus on oversupply and oil prices grounds the skepticism in concrete factors.
The bloc omits that Samsung's profit is a record and that AI demand continues to grow, which could support future gains.
Samsung's stock fails to ride the AI wave, while rival SK Hynix captures the real gains. The market sees through the profit numbers to the underlying competitive weakness.
By comparing Samsung's stock performance to SK Hynix, the narrative highlights a competitive disadvantage. The profit figure is downplayed in favor of relative market performance.
The bloc omits that Samsung's operating profit surged 1,800% and that the company remains a key AI beneficiary.
Asian markets shrug off Samsung's record profit, focusing instead on economic headwinds and geopolitical tensions. The AI boom is real, but so are the risks.
By embedding Samsung's profit within a broader market context of economic concerns, the narrative tempers the good news with caution. The paradox is presented as a natural market reaction.
The bloc omits the competitive underperformance of Samsung relative to SK Hynix, which is a key factor in the stock decline.
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