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Tesla deal could help boost Samsung's foundry business

Tesla deal could help boost Samsung's foundry business

UPI3 days ago
Samsung Electronics headquarters in South Korea. The company has signed a $16.5 billion contract to supply semiconductors to Tesla, according to the auto company's Elon Musk. Photo courtesy of Samsung Electronics
SEOUL, July 30 (UPI) -- South Korea's Samsung Electronics announced it has signed a $16.5 billion, eight-year contract to supply semiconductors to an unnamed global company, noting full details will be disclosed on Jan. 3, 2033.
Just hours later on Tuesday, however, Tesla CEO Elon Musk confirmed that Tesla was the buyer and Samsung's new Texas factory, which is being built, will produce next-generation AI processor A16 chips for Tesla.
Samsung, which rolls out A14 chips, lost out on the A15 chip deal to archrival TSMC, but managed to succeed in A16 chips. Samsung's Texas foundry is a flagship project in its plan to invest more than $37 billion in the United States by 2030.
"Samsung agreed to allow Tesla to assist in maximizing manufacturing efficiency. This is a critical point, as I will walk the line personally to accelerate the pace of progress," Musk said in a post on X.
The announcement prompted investors to snap up Samsung shares, and its stock price has jumped more than 11% on the Seoul bourse. The world's largest memory chipmaker has underperformed in the stock market due to challenges in the advanced high-bandwidth memory business.
On a brighter note for Samsung's troubled foundry business, Musk said that $16.5 billion is just the "bare minimum," and actual output is likely to be "several times higher."
Musk's comments fueled speculation that Samsung could win additional Tesla orders, such as the Dojo 2 chips, which are designed to train deep neural networks used in self-driving.
"Musk's remarks suggest that orders may expand to include Dojo 2 chips, as well," NH Investment & Securities analyst Ryu Young-ho said in a market report.
Observers believe that the mega-sized contract will anyhow help Samsung's foundry business turn around in terms of profitability and market share in a competition with the runaway leader TSMC of Taiwan.
According to Taipei-based business tracker TrendForce, TSMC's first-quarter market share stood at 67.6% in the global foundry business while that of Samsung Electronics was 7.7%.
Against this backdrop, Samsung's foundry business has suffered billions of dollars in annual losses over the past few years.
Samsung's contract with Tesla is also expected to affect the rivalry of leading foundry companies to master next-generation 2-nanometer-based technology. TSMC's yield rate in 2-nm process is reportedly about 70% compared to less than 60% of Samsung.
Yield rate, in semiconductor manufacturing, refers to the percentage of usable, defect-free chips produced from a single wafer.
"Thus far, Samsung has struggled to raise its yield rate in the 2-nm semiconductors to fall behind TSMC," SungKyunKwan University semiconductor professor Choi Byoung-deog told UPI.
"The contract with Tesla demonstrates that Samsung's 2-nm yield has substantially improved. If Samsung secures more deals with such big-tech companies as Qualcomm and Apple, it will be able to start catching up with TSMC," he said.
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology professor Kim Joung-ho agreed.
"Samsung should prove its efficiency and high yields with Tesla. Then, other major high-tech companies will show more interest in its foundry business," Kim said in an interview.
When it comes to the share price of Samsung Electronics, experts claim that the company needs to make a breakthrough in the lucrative HBM business, which is dominated by Samsung's local rival, SK hynix.
"If Samsung Electronics manages to supply cutting-edge HBMs to Nvidia, its share price would instantly surge," economic commentator Kim Kyeong-joon, formerly vice chairman at Deloitte Consulting Korea, said in a phone interview.
"The three-way alliance involving Nvidia, SK hynix and TSMC is quite strong. But Nvidia may want to diversify its HBM suppliers, offering Samsung a potential opportunity. Samsung should find ways to satisfy Nvidia," he said.
The Tesla order came shortly after Samsung Electronics Chairman Lee Jae-yong was cleared of criminal charges of accounting fraud and stock manipulation related to a merger between two Samsung units in 2015.
Earlier this month, the country's Supreme Court acquitted Lee, putting an end to his prolonged legal battles.
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  • Tom's Guide

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Using one phone as the caller speaking in the other language with the other phone translating, I had both phones translating the following in real time: 'The air was thick and salty, a warm blanket that wrapped around me the moment I stepped out of the car. My feet found the soft, warm sand, and I exhaled, feeling the last of my everyday stress melt away. The ocean stretched out, a vast expanse of brilliant turquoise, its waves coming in a steady, rhythmic hush. It wasn't a day for adventure, but for pure, unadulterated peace. I spent the afternoon under a palm tree, the leaves rustling like soft paper, watching the sun dip into the horizon, painting the sky in fiery shades of orange and pink. I took one last, deep breath, filling my lungs with the ocean's scent, grateful for the simple, quiet moments.' The iPhone 16 Pro Max with iOS 26 offers the better experience here because of how it speaks aloud the translation after a couple of sentences. 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It takes work—a lot of work—to create order, but things will fall into a mess on their own. This broken plate is a perfect little example of the universe's ultimate plan: more disorder, all the time." Live Translate on iOS 26 stumbled a couple of times with the translation, but the overall point about entropy got across. Just as before, it also announces that the translation is active after I've turned it on — with the actual translation beginning after a couple of sentences. On my iPhone 16 Pro Max, I really like how it breaks it down in iMessage style chat bubbles. What makes it more enjoyable is how Live Translate on iOS 26 makes it feel more like a natural conversation by overlaying the spoken translation over the speaker's voice. Not only does Galaxy AI wait until the caller is done speaking before it begins to speak and show me the translation, but I find it annoying that I can't scroll through the translation on my Galaxy Z Flip 7. Unlike the iPhone, it manages to translate the conversation more accurately — including the parts where the iPhone messed up. But despite this, I still like how iOS 26 performs overall. Winner: iOS 26 Lastly, I had Gemini create a story about someone explaining their day in the office in a more casual manner. Here's the full breakdown: My day? It's been a marathon of meetings that could have been emails and a battle with a printer that seems to hate me personally. I've been staring at the same spreadsheet for two hours, looking for a typo that has to be a single digit, and I'm pretty sure my eyes are crossing. The hamsters on the little wheel in my head have given up and are now just sitting in the corner drinking tiny glasses of water. I've hit peak brain capacity for the day, and now I'm just sitting here, pretending to be productive until it's a socially acceptable time to escape this fluorescent purgatory. The end result with this German translation is no different from the rest, as iOS 26 handles it in a more natural way with how it overlays the translated conversation while the person's actively speaking. It happens after a couple of sentences in and proceeds to keep the same pace throughout the rest of the conversation. It did stumble just once at the end. By this time, I was expecting the same drill as before with Galaxy AI. Specifically, it again waited until the entire conversation was over to start the translation — which makes it feel a bit awkward. Yes, the translation was accurate throughout, but I still don't like the long pause. That's why I tried it a second time, with the caller pausing for a longer period of time two sentences in. While this is the only way I'm able to get Galaxy AI to start translating earlier, it messes up the flow of the back-and-forth conversation. For this reason, I'm giving it to iOS 26. Winner: iOS 26 Beyond their ability to translate phone conversations in real time, it's worth mentioning some of the quirks I found testing these live translation features. Neither service allows me the option to save the transcripts while the feature is active, which is annoying because it'd be handy to have them saved to a note or something. Secondly, Live Translation with Galaxy AI doesn't allow me to scroll through the transcript while I'm actively on the call. I don't understand why you can't do this, but it'd be helpful to go back into the translated conversation to reference something I might've missed — or want to follow up on. Even though Galaxy AI was nearly spot-on with the translation and offers more supported languages, it's the way it executes the translation that makes it not as intuitive to use. 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