Nvidia Corp. and SK Hynix Inc. have agreed to partner on designing future generations of memory chips for AI, a win for a South Korean leader vying with Samsung Electronics Co. in a red-hot arena.
The two companies signed a multi-year agreement covering both chip design and manufacturing. Nvidia will help its partner diversify into new arenas, encompassing infrastructure and physical AI as well as memory for Vera Rubin, Nvidia's most powerful accelerator.SK Hynix is set to for a strong sales and profit jump on its deal to supply Nvidia with a full lineup of DRAM, high-bandwidth memory and solid-state drives. Nvidia's AI infrastructure technology partnership, announced on June 7, will strengthen SK Hynix's position as a long-term supplier of memory products across multiple AI platforms. Along with HBM for AI training GPUs, SK Hynix is likely to supply more generations of HBM for AI inference systems. Sales of DRAM for CPUs and SSDs used to store inference data are set to grow over the next few years. SK Hynix should remain a lead supplier for AI-oriented PC architecture like Nvidia RTX Spark. Long-term supply agreements make it easier for SK Hynix to expand capacity and gradually increase market share.
- Masahiro Wakasugi and Jake Silverman, analystsSK Hynix's shares slid 10% on Monday, tracking a broader selloff in Asian tech. Stock in the company and its memory sector rivals have skyrocketed over the past year, driven north by surging chip prices. SK Hynix and its peers are racing to supply HBM to Nvidia, which is in turn scrambling to supply the accelerators that hyperscalers such as Meta Platforms Inc. need to train and operate AI services. Memory has emerged as “probably the toughest” bottleneck to resolve for the tech industry, Arm Holdings Plc CEO Rene Haas said last week.“Together, we will co-develop the next generation of memory for AI factories and support the accelerating global expansion of AI infrastructure — from frontier model training to agentic and physical AI,” Huang said in the statement.Huang is pushing a slate of products in coming years, and Asian companies — including South Korean firms — will play a critical role. In Taipei, Nvidia's CEO took the unusual step of hosting a dinner with partners including SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won.Since arriving in Seoul in past days, Huang similarly dined with several high-profile industry names. He called on gaming studios Krafton Inc. and NC Corp., whose endorsement may be key to ensuring widespread adoption of Nvidia's RTX Spark chip — its foray into a PC sphere dominated by Intel Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc.Nvidia announced a series of tie-ups Monday with big local names other than SK Hynix. The US company will help SK Telecom Co. and Naver Corp. build AI cloud services, and team up with Doosan Group on robotics.
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