Author:137 Labs
On April 8, 2026, the South Korean stock market staged a dramatic rebound. The KOSPI index closed up 6.87% at 5,872.34 points, gaining 377.56 points in a single day. It hit an intraday high of 5,919.60 points, briefly triggering a program trading circuit breaker.
This was a violent risk asset rally driven by a sharp drop in geopolitical risks (a provisional two-week ceasefire agreement reached between the US and Iran, with security guarantees for passage through the Strait of Hormuz) coupled with Samsung Electronics' exceptionally strong Q1 earnings guidance. The semiconductor sector was the absolute main theme, with heavyweights like Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix leading the gains, powering a strong rebound for the entire Korean stock market from its early April slump.
The Q1 earnings guidance released by Samsung Electronics on the evening of April 7 directly ignited market sentiment: consolidated revenue of approximately 133 trillion KRW (+68.1% YoY), operating profit of approximately 57.2 trillion KRW (+755% YoY). The quarterly profit alone surpassed the total for the entire year of 2025 (43.6 trillion KRW), far exceeding market consensus (around 40–42 trillion KRW). This is not only Samsung's best quarterly performance in history but also the most直观的 footnote of the AI-driven memory (DRAM/NAND/HBM) super cycle.
But before enjoying this earnings feast, we must first review the "invisible risk" that the market has been most concerned about over the past month — the impact of the Middle East conflict on Samsung's chip supply chain. Below is a systematic breakdown of this impact based on the latest (March-April 2026) information from authoritative media and research institutions.
Geopolitical Risk Review: Impact of Middle East Conflict on Samsung's Chip Supply Chain
I. When Did the Impact Begin?
Clear timeline: February 28, 2026 (outbreak of the Iran conflict).
Reuters reported: "Samsung's stock price has fallen 14% since the war began on February 28."
Government-Business Communication Timeline: Early March 2026 (around March 5), the South Korean government held emergency discussions with Samsung and other companies on supply chain risks.
Conclusion: February 28 — Immediate impact on the market and expectations; Early March — Supply chain risks entered the substantive assessment phase; Mid-to-late March — Began to transmit to manufacturing, PMI, and material supply.
II. Core Reasons for the Impact (Essentially 3 Pathways)
- Key Material: Helium Supply Shock 【Most Critical】 The Middle East (especially Qatar) is a major global source of helium (approx. 30–38% of global supply). Helium use: Cooling for lithography machines, maintaining vacuum environments, leak detection (irreplaceable). Authoritative quote: "Helium is essential for semiconductor production, with no substitute" "Attacks on Qatari facilities damaged helium supply." Mechanism: Middle East conflict → Damage to Qatari gas fields/helium facilities → Decline in helium supply → Cooling/manufacturing constraints at fabs → Chip production capacity risk.
- Energy Costs (Chip industry is extremely electricity-intensive) South Korea sources 70% of its crude oil from the Middle East; chip fabs are among the most power-intensive industries globally. Impact path: War → Rising oil & gas prices → Rising electricity prices → Rising chip manufacturing costs → Pressure on profits/capacity.
- Logistics & Supply Chain (Strait of Hormuz) A key global shipping lane (energy + chemical transport). War increases transport risks or even closure. Impact: Delays in industrial gas, chemical, and equipment transportation; increased supply chain uncertainty.
- Additional Factor (Demand side): AI data center investment might be delayed due to rising energy costs; the Middle East itself is also an important market for Samsung's home appliances/electronics.
III. How Significant is the Impact? (Phased Assessment)
(1) Short-term (Current: 2026 Q1)
Actual Impact: Very limited / No substantial impact on capacity yet.
Evidence: Samsung's Q1 profit surge (driven by AI cycle); Company statements "sufficient inventory / diversified supply chain"; Industry assessment "no significant production disruptions currently".
Key Reason: Semiconductor companies generally maintain 3-6 months of inventory for key materials.
(2) Medium-term (3–6 months)
Beginning to enter the risk zone. Korean companies rely on Qatar for about 65% of their helium, with inventory lasting roughly 6 months. If the conflict persists into Q3, production line efficiency declines or limited production may occur.
(3) Long-term (6 months+)
Potential major impact (structural risk): Chip capacity decline, worsening cost structure, slowdown in AI industry expansion.
IV. The Key for the Market Now
The current market is experiencing "expected impact > actual impact".
Manifestation: Stock price once fell (-14%), but profits hit record highs.
Explanation: Capital markets price future risks; the实体产业 still relies on inventory + orders for support.
V. Summary of Impact Severity
The impact of the Middle East conflict on Samsung's chip supply chain can be clearly divided into three phases:
- Short-term (Now, Q1 2026): Impact Level Low
Inventory buffer + strong AI demand completely overshadow the risk; actual production has hardly been interrupted so far, with Samsung's Q1 profit still achieving explosive growth of +755% YoY.
- Medium-term (Next 3–6 months): Impact Level Medium
Key material inventories like helium are gradually depleting. If the conflict persists, production line efficiency may decline, or localized production limitations may occur.
- Long-term (6+ months): Impact Level High
If risks are not resolved, it could lead to actual declines in chip production capacity, significantly worsened manufacturing costs, and further slow down the global AI industry's expansion pace.
Currently, Samsung's chips "haven't been hit yet," but they are standing on the临界点 of supply chain risk — the real impact depends on whether the war lasts more than 6 months. The ceasefire agreement on April 8 temporarily "zeroed out" this risk, directly igniting the Korean stock market rebound.
1. Revenue & Profit Analysis: The Perfect Storm of AI Memory Volume and Price Rising Together
- Revenue: 133 trillion KRW, +41.7% QoQ, +68.1% YoY. First time breaking 130 trillion in a quarter, mainly from the explosion in the Device Solutions (DS, semiconductor) division. Memory chip prices surged in Q1 (DRAM contract prices +90–95% QoQ, NAND also rose significantly), combined with AI data center demand boosting shipments, creating a double boost from volume and price.
- Operating Profit: 57.2 trillion KRW, a massive +755% YoY, with gross margin significantly improved. The DS division contributed over 42 trillion KRW in profit (nearly 75% of total profit), with the memory business being almost entirely the功臣.
Core Driver: AI High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) + general DRAM/NAND shortage. Although HBM currently still has a low share, it is the fastest growing and is the most certain growth point for the future.
2. Above or Below Expectations?
Far exceeded expectations. Market consensus for Q1 operating profit was around 40–42 trillion KRW; Samsung's actual guidance of 57.2 trillion delivered a super surprise of "over 30% above expectations." This "beat"本质上 stems from AI computing demand far exceeding early estimates, causing both memory prices and shipments to surpass expectations — a resonance of structural (AI-specific memory) and cyclical (general memory shortage) factors.
3. Business Capability Breakdown: Earnings Logic + How to Calculate Business Value
The core logic of Samsung's earnings is "DS division (semiconductors) is king, other businesses support." Almost all excess profit in Q1 came from DS:
- Memory Business (DRAM + NAND + HBM): Volume (bit growth) + Price (ASP) both rising. DRAM ASP rose approx. +55% QoQ, NAND +53%, with gross margins reaching 67% and 52% respectively. Calculation: Shipment growth × Price increase × Fixed cost dilution → Explosive gross profit.
- HBM Competition: SK Hynix still leads, but Samsung's HBM3E passed verification, HBM4 mass production accelerated, with market share expected to rise to 28–30% in 2026. Samsung's advantage lies in vertical integration and production scale.
- Other Businesses Provide Buffer: Mobile, display panels provide a buffer during cyclical downturns, but current contribution is limited.
Earnings Logic: The market highly focuses on "memory price sustainability." Analyst models typically are: Q1/Q2 prices locked in at high levels → Q3/Q4产能扩张 risk. If actual execution falls slightly short of expectations, it triggers "bad news" — this is the classic cyclical stock characteristic of "expectations being set extremely high, with very low tolerance for error."
4. Valuation: What is the P/E and P/S? Is it reasonable in the current market?
Current Valuation (as of around April 9, 2026):
Trailing P/E (past 12 months): Approx. 29–38x (highly浮动, historical neutral range 12–15x). Forward P/E (2026 full-year expected): Very low, only 6.7–7.5x (optimistic models even 3.8x), reflecting strong market confidence in significant profit growth for full-year 2026.
P/S (Price-to-Sales, market cap/revenue): Approx. 3.7–3.9x (TTM), corresponding to "payback in 3-4 years".
Bull Market Rationality Judgment: In the "bull market phase" of the AI memory super cycle, this valuation is reasonable or even low. Historical highs P/S can reach 4x+, forward P/E often below 10x. But once entering a downturn cycle, P/E expands rapidly. The current low forward P/E indicates the market has partially priced in the high growth for 2026, but has not yet透支 2027–2028 —前提是 AI demand continues to exceed expectations.
5. Future Growth & Financial Risk: Is the market still big enough?
Positive: AI computing demand is a "large enough foreseeable market." Global data center HBM/DRAM demand compound annual growth rate (CAGR) for 2026–2030 is still over 30–40%; Samsung + Hynix combined share over 70%; growth path is clear (HBM4/HBM5 iteration + AI PC/edge computing).
Risk Points (pointing to limited growth):
- Cyclical Ceiling: Classic storage industry cycle "short supply → expansion → oversupply → price collapse." Price decline is highly likely after capacity expansion in H2 2026. Any slight delay, Q3/Q4 guidance falling short of high expectations becomes bad news.
- Geopolitical Supply Chain Risk: Although the Middle East conflict is temporarily eased by the ceasefire, key material inventories like helium last only about 6 months. If turmoil resumes, it could still constrain growth.
- Pulling Forward Future Orders: HBM orders are mostly long-term contracts (some locked until end-2026), but Samsung is still expanding capacity, no obvious front-loading risk has appeared yet.
- Backstop Plan: Yes — Diversified businesses (mobile phones, panels, foundry) + ample cash reserves, high dividend yield (2026 expected dividend yield ~5%). Samsung has initiated Helium Recovery Systems (HeRS) and diversified procurement with Linde/Air Products etc.
- Overall Financial Risk: Healthy balance sheet, no significant leverage. But if memory prices crash in 2027 + geopolitical disturbances recur, profits could be halved, requiring valuation reset. The market is giving a "bull market pricing," with actually not much room for error.
Conclusion: Samsung's Q1 is the tangible realization of AI红利, and the South Korean stock market surge on April 8 is a collective confirmation of the super cycle + easing geopolitical risks. However, the combination of "extremely high expectations" + cyclicality + dual supply chain attributes means any subsequent execution shortfall or new risk signal could bring corrections. Investors need to closely track Q2 guidance, HBM market share progress, global AI capital expenditure, and the implementation of the Middle East ceasefire.
Long-term, Korean semiconductor leaders still stand in the most favorable position of the AI wave, but cyclical nature dictates "making quick money is easy, holding positions is hard."
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute any investment advice. The crypto market is highly volatile, investing involves risks, please conduct your own research and bear the consequences independently.







