South Korea Reaps Riches, America Turns Hostile

marsbit发布于2026-06-30更新于2026-06-30

文章摘要

The US has filed a collective antitrust lawsuit in California against Samsung, SK Hynix, and US-based Micron, alleging they colluded to create a "RAMpocalypse" by slashing traditional DRAM production and raising prices 700% over four years amid the AI boom. This lawsuit targets the heart of the AI supply chain: High Bandwidth Memory (HBM), critical for Nvidia's GPUs. Currently, SK Hynix (57%), Samsung (22%), and Micron (21%) dominate global HBM production. The case highlights a deeper US concern: in the AI era, South Korea, through its HBM dominance, is capturing an estimated 35% of global AI profits, second only to the US (49%). SK Hynix's operating profit margin recently hit a record 72%. In response to the lawsuit, South Korea announced a massive $800 trillion won investment to build four new chip plants, doubling down on its strategic position. Analysts see the lawsuit not merely as a consumer price issue but as strategic pressure. It aims to support Micron's US manufacturing expansion (subsidized by the CHIPS Act) and secure America's share of AI profits by bringing more HBM production onshore. However, South Korea's rapid execution and massive cash flow from current HBM sales give it a significant speed advantage over US build-out timelines. The conflict underscores a fundamental shift: AI infrastructure like GPUs and HBM is becoming a new form of strategic national resource, akin to oil. While Nvidia and Korean memory giants are interdependent, the struggle over pro...

By|Beyond the Headlines, Authors | Banjun, Huahua

America has finally made a move against South Korea.

This time, it’s not about cars, steel, or tariffs.

It’s about memory chips.

On June 25th, Samsung and SK Hynix were hit with a class-action lawsuit in a California federal court. Sharing the defendant’s bench with them was Micron, an American company.

Not even sparing its own.

The accusation is collusion to create a "RAMpocalypse." The three companies are alleged to have slashed traditional DRAM production capacity under the guise of AI transformation, driving up memory prices by 700% over four years.

Four days later, South Korea’s response arrived. Jin Jung-gwan, South Korea’s Minister of Trade, Industry and Energy, announced an investment of 800 trillion won: four new wafer fabs, all-in on memory for the next fifteen years.

America takes action on one side; South Korea doubles down on the other.

This is no ordinary antitrust case. The first true resource war of the AI era has begun.

1. South Korea Steps into the AI Profit Center

Let's look at some core numbers.

The global AI net profit pool in 2026 is estimated at around $637 billion. According to Altimeter’s calculations, the profit distribution looks like this:

The US takes 49%, roughly $314 billion. The core is Nvidia, single-handedly capturing $207 billion.

South Korea takes 35%, roughly $223 billion. Samsung and SK Hynix together account for $222 billion.

The US and South Korea combined account for 84% of global AI profits. All other countries share the remaining 16%.

The global AI business today is essentially a profit split between two countries: the US and South Korea. Nvidia takes the largest slice, the Korean duo takes the second largest. All other nations combined get less than 20%.

South Korea’s 35% profit comes from an incredibly concentrated source: HBM (High Bandwidth Memory).

For high-bandwidth memory, there are only three global giants capable of mass production. SK Hynix holds 57%, Samsung 22%, and Micron 21%.

Nvidia is the GPU king. But GPUs need HBM to function. An H200 requires 141GB of HBM, a B200 requires 192GB. Each GPU needs 6 to 8 HBM chips. Without HBM, a GPU just spins its wheels.

In other words, in the AI era, the hardware bottleneck isn’t GPU computing power, but memory bandwidth.

This creates a supply chain dynamic: the better Nvidia sells, the more money South Korea makes. The faster Nvidia expands production, the greater South Korea’s demand.

Every time GPT is trained, South Korea profits. Every time an Agent is deployed, South Korea profits. Every time a new AI data center is built, South Korea still profits.

How much exactly? SK Hynix’s operating profit margin in Q1 2026 was 72%, surpassing Nvidia’s 65% and TSMC’s 58%, setting a new global record for the semiconductor industry.

Net profit of 40 trillion won in a single quarter. Over 2 billion RMB net profit per day.

From July 2025 to April 2026, over nine months, South Korea added 100 companies with market caps exceeding one trillion won. It took South Korea 10 years to achieve the same growth previously. (Extended reading: Nine Months, South Korea Adds 100 Trillion-Won Companies)

The total market capitalization of the South Korean stock market has more than doubled, surpassing $5 trillion, overtaking India to become the world’s sixth-largest stock market. The KOSPI index has risen 70% this year, breaking 7,000 points.

South Korean household paper wealth has increased by over 1,000 trillion won, approaching 40% of annual GDP. A nationwide stock-buying frenzy has seen many citizens invest in Samsung and SK Hynix, doubling their paper assets.

South Korea is experiencing a national-level wealth creation movement driven by AI chips.

2. Why America is Turning Hostile

Back to that lawsuit.

On the surface, it’s consumer advocacy. DRAM prices rose 700%, consumers couldn’t take it anymore, and sued the manufacturers for monopoly.

But look closely, there’s a detail.

The defendants aren’t just Samsung and SK; Micron is on the defendant's bench too.

American consumers are suing their own country’s chip company along with the Korean ones.

Why?

Because America’s real worry isn’t a single company, or even the price itself.

It’s a bigger issue: AI is turning memory into the new oil.

For the past two decades, the US has firmly controlled key positions in the semiconductor supply chain: CPUs, GPUs, EDA, operating systems, software ecosystems.

Today, it suddenly finds that a critical layer of AI infrastructure is held by South Korea.

Samsung and SK Hynix have "previous convictions." In 2005, the two companies pleaded guilty in the US for DRAM price-fixing, paying a combined $731 million in fines, with several executives serving prison sentences.

The lawsuit specifically dredges up this history, attempting to establish a pattern of "systematic collusion."

And Micron? Micron wasn’t charged in that case. This time it’s listed as a co-defendant, but it’s an American company, has factories in the US, receives federal CHIPS Act subsidies, and is building new fabs in Idaho and New York.

Look at this situation.

On one hand, the US government is pouring money into Micron for domestic fab construction—a $50 billion domestic investment plan, $6.1 billion in federal subsidies. The Trump administration is even considering converting subsidies into equity investments, taking direct stakes as it did with Intel. Trump publicly praised Micron at rallies.

On the other hand, consumers are suing Micron along with the two Korean companies.

Kill a thousand enemies, lose three hundred of your own. But America did it anyway.

The reason is, what truly rankles America is that South Korea, with just two companies, is taking 35% of the global AI industry’s profits. And American consumers and businesses are footing the bill.

3. The Memory Price Surge Isn't Just Collusion

First, let’s be clear about one fact: memory prices are experiencing a strong cyclical upswing, and it won’t stop in the short term.

American financial group Jefferies predicts memory prices will rise another 40% to 50% quarter-on-quarter in Q3 2026, and another 30% to 40% in Q4. For the full year 2027, a year-on-year increase of 40% to 45% is expected. A significant slowdown might not occur until 2028 at the earliest.

But who caused this price surge?

The lawsuit says it’s collusion by three manufacturers. But what’s really happening is more complex than the complaint suggests.

In the past, how much DDR memory versus HBM a fab produced was balanced based on market demand. If DDR demand was high, more DDR was made.

AI has disrupted that balance.

HBM chips occupy twice the wafer area of regular DDR chips. In 2026, HBM is expected to account for 25% of global DRAM wafer capacity, with demand growing 70% annually. Global total capacity is only growing 14%, with traditional DRAM allocation growing a mere 10%.

Global large model companies are frantically expanding data centers. Nvidia’s GPUs are selling at capacity limits, with each GPU requiring massive amounts of HBM. The three manufacturers shifting capacity to HBM is commercial rationality—HBM offers 72% margins, while regular DRAM might be 20% to 30%.

Faced with that profit gap, any enterprise would choose to pivot to HBM.

The problem is, the three of them combined control over 95% of the global DRAM market. When all three make the same decision simultaneously, even if they never sat in a conference room to discuss it, the effect is indistinguishable from collusion.

This is a structural issue of an oligopolistic market.

The result is: the more AI flourishes, the higher the cost for ordinary computers, phones, and servers. Apple is merely the first to hand this bill to consumers; it won’t be the last.

And American consumers don’t care about all that. They just know a DDR5 memory stick that cost $200 four years ago now costs $1,400.

4. The Lawsuit is Just the Surface

If you only look at the surface, this is an antitrust lawsuit. It might involve fines, settlements, or drag on for years.

But in the broader picture, this lawsuit’s function is to apply pressure.

America’s real demand is clear: memory manufacturing must be reshored.

Micron received $6.1 billion in CHIPS Act subsidies, aiming to invest $50 billion domestically in the US by 2030, achieving 40% domestic DRAM production capacity.

The logic is straightforward: 35% of global AI profits flow to South Korea because HBM manufacturing capability is there. If Micron can capture more share, those profits return to America.

A single lawsuit, triple effect:

First, apply legal and public pressure on Korean companies, increasing their operational costs in the US market.

Second, buy time for Micron. Micron’s New York fab is already delayed, pushed from 2028 to 2030 for production. Micron needs time to catch up. A lawsuit tying up competitors helps itself.

Third, reinforce the national security narrative. If the court finds Korean companies guilty of price manipulation, subsequent policy interventions in the memory chip supply chain gain legitimacy.

Plainly speaking, America insists on pushing the lawsuit because the long-term gains outweigh the short-term losses.

5. South Korea Doubles Down Instead

After the American antitrust lawsuit, South Korea offered no explanations. It directly responded with a national-level industrial investment plan.

South Korea’s official announcement of a trillion-dollar semiconductor investment on June 29th is essentially doubling down on the construction of the Yongin Semiconductor Mega Cluster. This isn’t just building a few fabs; it’s about concentrating the entire HBM chain—from design, materials, packaging to mass production—within the same region.

This highly integrated supply chain can shorten R&D iteration cycles, creating generational advantages over new, geographically dispersed overseas capacities.

Financially, the two semiconductor giants’ total investment plan exceeding a trillion dollars is backed by robust cash flow.

South Korea’s logic is clear: You file a lawsuit, I expand production. You try to tie me down with law, I outpace you with scale.

Moreover, South Korea has an advantage America cannot replicate: speed.

SK Hynix’s profit margin is 72%. Samsung’s operating profit in Q1 2016 was 57 trillion won. They have ample cash flow to support expansion without waiting for government subsidy processes.

Micron’s New York fab won’t be operational until 2030. South Korea’s new fabs could start shipping by 2028.

This time gap is South Korea’s moat.

Minister Jin Jung-gwan said one thing: the global memory chip market size will grow to four times its current size in the next five years. South Korea’s assessment is that market growth is far faster than America’s catch-up speed. As long as AI demand continues to explode, South Korea’s production lead will continue to widen.

6. Symbiosis or Conflict?

From a longer perspective.

In the past, the world competed over who had more users.

Today, the world is beginning to compete over who possesses more capacity to produce intelligence. GPUs, HBM, electricity, data centers—these things once hidden in server rooms are becoming new national-level strategic resources.

Nvidia is the biggest winner of the AI era. No one disputes that.

But SK Hynix and Samsung are upstream from Nvidia. Every Nvidia GPU requires 6 to 8 HBM chips. Without HBM, the GPU is a piece of useless silicon.

This is a dependency America cannot unilaterally sever. Nvidia cannot avoid using Korean HBM; Micron only has a 21% share, and its capacity is still under construction. At least until 2028, Nvidia’s reliance on the Korean supply chain won’t fundamentally change.

America’s dilemma is that it nurtured Nvidia, but Nvidia’s supply chain delivers the largest slice of profit to South Korea.

GPU profits go to America. HBM profits go to South Korea. Together, they devour 84% of global AI profits. AI has, for the first time, placed a country of less than 52 million people on the second tier of the global tech profit chain.

Symbiosis, because they need each other. Nvidia needs HBM; South Korea needs Nvidia’s orders.

Tension, because profit distribution is never static. When scale is large enough, the distribution method itself sparks conflict.

Today’s lawsuit is just the first public expression of this tension.

So America suing Samsung and SK today isn’t just about price. South Korea’s frantic fab-building isn’t just about making money.

They’re not fighting over chips, but over their position in the next generation of the world’s industrial system.

Words from 【Beyond the Headlines】:

I checked the outcome of that 2005 DRAM price-fixing case.

Samsung pleaded guilty, fined $300 million. SK Hynix pleaded guilty, fined $185 million. Including Elpida (a Japanese memory company), total fines reached $731 million. Several executives went to prison.

Twenty years ago, America sued Korean chip companies because memory was hurting Dell and HP’s procurement costs. That was a PC-era story.

Today, America is suing Korean chip companies because the HBM shift is pulling the global AI profit center towards Seoul.

The case is the same, but the era is not. Last time it was a trade dispute; this time it’s industrial sovereignty competition.

I don’t know how this lawsuit will be categorized looking back five years from now. But I have one judgment:

It might be the first landmark event in the resource competition of the AI era.

GPUs, HBM, electricity, data centers—these things are becoming the oil, steel, and railways of the new era.

And we all know the stories of oil, steel, and railways. Every time, they eventually become matters of the state.

This time will be no exception.

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相关问答

QWhat is the core reason behind the US lawsuit against Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron regarding DRAM prices?

AThe lawsuit accuses the three companies of colluding to create a 'RAMpocalypse' by cutting traditional DRAM production capacity under the guise of transitioning to AI, thereby raising memory prices by 700% over four years. However, the deeper concern for the US is the shift in the AI profit center, where South Korea, through its dominance in HBM (High Bandwidth Memory) production, is capturing 35% of global AI profits, challenging US control over critical semiconductor infrastructure.

QHow is South Korea positioned in the global AI profit landscape according to the article?

ASouth Korea captures approximately 35% of global AI profits, amounting to about $223 billion, primarily through Samsung and SK Hynix's dominance in HBM production. This positions South Korea as the second-largest profit-taker after the US (which takes 49%, largely via Nvidia). The two Korean companies' combined profits from HBM are nearly equivalent to the entire Korean share of the AI profit pool.

QWhat strategic response did South Korea announce following the US antitrust lawsuit?

AIn response to the lawsuit, South Korea's Minister of Trade, Industry and Energy announced a massive investment plan of 800 trillion won over the next fifteen years to build four new wafer fabrication plants. This 'all-in' bet on memory semiconductors, particularly focused on the Yongin semiconductor supercluster, aims to consolidate the entire HBM supply chain from design to mass production within one region to secure and extend its technological and scale advantages.

QWhy does the article compare the current situation to a 'resource war' in the AI era?

AThe article compares it to a resource war because critical components like GPUs, HBM, power, and data centers are becoming the new strategic national resources, akin to oil, steel, and railways in past industrial eras. The competition is no longer just about market share but about controlling the foundational infrastructure that produces AI capabilities, with profit distribution and technological sovereignty at stake between major powers like the US and South Korea.

QWhat is the paradoxical relationship between Nvidia and the Korean memory chip giants described in the article?

AThe relationship is described as symbiotic yet tense. It is symbiotic because Nvidia's GPUs are dependent on HBM from Samsung and SK Hynix to function, and the Korean companies rely on Nvidia's massive orders. However, tension arises from the profit distribution. While Nvidia is the biggest winner in AI, a significant portion (35%) of the industry's profits flows to its Korean suppliers. This creates a dependency the US is uncomfortable with, leading to conflicts like the lawsuit, which is seen as an attempt to rebalance control and bring more manufacturing back to the US.

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理解 Mantis ($M):跨链互操作性的新纪元 在不断发展的 Web3 和加密货币领域,新项目努力提供创新解决方案,旨在提升用户体验并扩展去中心化金融生态系统中的功能可能性。其中一个备受关注的项目是 Mantis ($M),这是一个基于跨链互操作性和基于意图的结算原则的开创性协议。本文深入探讨 Mantis 的基本方面,包括其核心功能、创建者、投资支持、创新特性和关键里程碑。 什么是 Mantis ($M)? Mantis 被描述为一个 多领域意图结算协议,简化跨链交互,使用户能够在各种区块链平台上无缝执行复杂的金融交易。该协议通过三个主要层次运作: 意图表达:用户可以使用自然语言表达他们的交易目标,借助 DISE LLM,一个先进的 AI 语言模型。例如,用户可能会表达希望以 1% 的特定滑点容忍度将以太坊 (ETH) 兑换为索拉纳 (SOL)。 执行:这一层利用一网络的求解者竞争以满足用户意图。交易通过需求一致性 (CoWs) 和订单流拍卖 (OFAs) 等机制执行,确保用户需求得到最佳满足。 结算:利用跨区块链通信 (IBC) 协议,Mantis 实现原子跨链交易,使用户能够在包括以太坊、索拉纳和 Cosmos 在内的各种支持链上操作。 Mantis 旨在为闲置资产引入 原生收益生成,利用密码学证明在整个过程中保持交易的完整性。 创建者与开发团队 Mantis 由 Composable Foundation 构思,该组织以其对区块链互操作性解决方案的重视而闻名。该基金会与包括哈佛大学和里斯本大学在内的知名学术机构合作,致力于广泛的研究和开发工作,以指导 Mantis 的架构和功能。 Composable Foundation 对于促进区块链领域创新的承诺,使 Mantis 成为满足多个区块链网络间互操作性日益增长需求的强大解决方案。 投资者与支持 虽然关于个别投资者的具体细节尚未公开披露,但 Mantis 得到了来自多个实体的 substantial 支持,包括: 来自 IBC 支持链的生态系统补助,支持协议在去中心化金融生态系统中的增长和整合。 与基础设施提供商的战略合作伙伴关系,增强 Mantis 的网络能力和部署策略。 通过 Composable Foundation 的财政支持,确保持续的财务支持以满足持续开发和运营成本。 这些合作努力反映了利益相关者对增强跨链功能和 Mantis 基础设施创新潜在效用的重要性达成共识。 关键创新 Mantis 通过几项开创性创新使其功能和效用得以提升: 链无关意图:用户可以从任何支持的链发起交易,同时在另一条链上结算。这种灵活性赋予用户权力,推动不同平台之间的互动增加。 AI 驱动界面:DISE LLM 的集成使用户能够使用自然语言进行复杂的 DeFi 操作,从而简化交互,使区块链技术对更广泛的受众可及。 跨域 MEV 捕获:Mantis 通过求解者之间的竞争创建了一个最大可提取价值 (MEV) 的内部市场。这种创新方法允许在复杂交易中实现更高的效率和价值提取。 模块化结算层:该协议支持多种验证方法,包括零知识证明和乐观汇总,提供一个可以适应新兴区块链技术的多功能框架。 历史时间线 Mantis 的发展标志着几个关键里程碑,描绘了其轨迹和增长: | 年份 | 里程碑 | |————|————————————————————————-| | 2022 | 在 Composable Foundation 的研究部门内进行初步概念开发。 | | 2024 年 Q3 | 启动具有索拉纳和以太坊之间桥接能力的测试网。 | | 2025 年 Q1 | 预计代币生成事件 (TGE) 与主网启动同时进行。 | | 2025 年 Q2 | 预计集成 DISE LLM 并扩展跨链能力。 | | 2025 年下半年 | 计划通过进一步的 IBC 升级支持超过 15 条链。 | 该时间线概述了 Mantis 的演变,从概念讨论到积极实施和未来增长阶段。 生态系统增长策略 Mantis 的生态系统增长策略包括几项旨在鼓励用户参与和开发者参与的举措: 积分系统:用户可以通过提供流动性和参与推荐计划获得协议积分。这些积分可在未来兑换奖励,促进一个强大的用户社区。 模块化软件开发工具包 (SDK):该工具包使开发者能够基于意图驱动模型创建应用程序,利用 Mantis 的基础设施,从而促进其生态系统内的创新。 治理模型:随着协议的成熟,$M 代币持有者将对协议治理拥有发言权,允许他们对提议的升级和变更进行投票,从而增强社区参与和去中心化。 Mantis 代表了跨链架构领域的重大进展。通过无缝集成先进的 AI 算法与强大的结算框架,Mantis 旨在解决多链生态系统中的碎片化问题。其创新方法优先考虑改善用户体验,同时遵循去中心化和安全性的基本原则,为区块链技术的未来互操作性设定了新标准。 随着 Mantis 继续其增长和实施之旅,它承诺成为 Web3 和去中心化金融竞争格局中值得密切关注的项目。凭借其跨越边界和提升用户参与的关注,Mantis 有望成为加密货币领域未来发展的重要组成部分。

115人学过发布于 2025.03.18更新于 2025.03.18

什么是 $M

如何购买M

欢迎来到HTX.com!我们已经让购买MemeCore(M)变得简单而便捷。跟随我们的逐步指南,放心开始您的加密货币之旅。第一步:创建您的HTX账户使用您的电子邮件、手机号码注册一个免费账户在HTX上。体验无忧的注册过程并解锁所有平台功能。立即注册第二步:前往买币页面,选择您的支付方式信用卡/借记卡购买:使用您的Visa或Mastercard即时购买MemeCore(M)。余额购买:使用您HTX账户余额中的资金进行无缝交易。第三方购买:探索诸如Google Pay或Apple Pay等流行支付方法以增加便利性。C2C购买:在HTX平台上直接与其他用户交易。HTX场外交易台(OTC)购买:为大量交易者提供个性化服务和竞争性汇率。第三步:存储您的MemeCore(M)购买完您的MemeCore(M)后,将其存储在您的HTX账户钱包中。您也可以通过区块链转账将其发送到其他地方或者用于交易其他加密货币。第四步:交易MemeCore(M)在HTX的现货市场轻松交易MemeCore(M)。访问您的账户,选择您的交易对,执行您的交易,并实时监控。HTX为初学者和经验丰富的交易者提供了友好的用户体验。

2.1k人学过发布于 2025.07.02更新于 2026.06.18

如何购买M

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