Samsung Electronics Co. has delivered the fifth-generation high-bandwidth memory (HBM) to a major AI chip maker, Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD), raising expectations that it may also supply its high-performance memory to the world’s leading AI chipmaker, Nvidia Corp.
AMD said on Thursday that its newest MI350 Series accelerators are powered by 288GB HBM3E chips from Samsung Electronics and US chipmaker Micron Technology Inc.
The announcement was made during AMD’s media event to introduce its latest accelerator series, which consists of Instinct MI350X and MI355X graphics-processing units and platforms.
It was the first time that Samsung Electronics’ supply of HBM3E chips had been officially confirmed. The Korean chip giant appears to have supplied AMD with the 12-layer HBM3E, or HBM3E 12H, according to the specifications of AMD’s MI350 series.
Samsung's HBM3E chip During its first-quarter earnings call with analysts in April, Kim Jae-joon, executive vice president of Samsung’s memory business, said the company expected more customers would purchase Samsung's fifth-generation HBM chips following successful sample delivery.
Analysts are now keeping a close eye on whether Samsung Electronics will succeed in supplying its latest HBM chips to Nvidia after its supply to AMD.
The Korean chipmaker has passed Nvidia’s quality tests for its HBM3 chips but has not yet begun shipments to the leading US chip designer.
It projected that it could begin supplying HBM4 chips to its clients as early as the first half of 2026.
Samsung Electronics is currently lagging behind its crosstown rival SK Hynix Inc. in the HBM race, having failed to secure supply deals for its advanced memory chips with Nvidia.
SOCAMM, short for small outline compression attached memory module, is a new type of high-performance, low-power memory for AI servers in data centers.
The technology is being dubbed the “second HBM,” given its critical role in enabling AI acceleration.
According to people familiar with the matter, Nvidia commissioned all three major memory makers – Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix and Micron – to develop SOCAMM prototypes, and the US chipmaker was the first to receive Nvidia’s approval for mass production.
Amid intensifying competition in the advanced memory chip race, Samsung Electronics is betting big on the sixth-generation HBM chip, HBM4 and HBM4E, which could be fitted in Nvidia’s next-generation graphics architecture Vera Rubin, the successor of the Blackwell AI chip.
Samsung Electronics shares ended down 2% at 58,300 won ($42.59) on Friday amid growing geopolitical concerns following Israel's surprise attacks on Iran.
Write to Sookyung Seo at skseo@hankyung.com Jennifer Nicholson-Breen edited this article.