The semiconductor arms race is heating up, and Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. (SSNLF) is making moves that suggest it's serious about closing the gap with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Ltd. (TSM). After years of watching TSMC dominate the foundry business, Samsung is accelerating its comeback with a massive production ramp-up and a string of high-profile customer wins.
Here's what's happening: Samsung is pushing hard into 2-nanometer chip production, and the numbers are striking. According to Counterpoint Research, the company plans to increase its 2 nm production capacity by 163% over the course of 2025—going from 8,000 wafers per month in 2024 to 21,000 by year's end. That's not just incremental improvement. That's a statement of intent.
The breakthrough comes as Samsung has stabilized its 3 nm production and improved yields on its 2 nm process to around 55-60%. Better yields mean fewer defects, which means Samsung can actually deliver on those big contracts it's been chasing. And speaking of big contracts, there's the reported $16.5 billion deal with Tesla Inc. (TSLA) for next-generation AI6 chips. When Elon Musk diversifies his chip supply chain, people notice.
Samsung is also pulling in orders across the board. Its System LSI division has secured business for Exynos 2600 processors, Apple Inc. (AAPL) image sensors, and mining ASICs from Chinese manufacturers MicroBT and Canaan Inc. (CAN). Industry watchers expect Qualcomm Inc. (QCOM) could be next in line. The firm at Counterpoint Research noted that advancements in Samsung's 2 nm process could become "a critical turning point" as the company attracts more mobile, supercomputing, and AI customers.
Samsung's new Taylor, Texas facility is a crucial piece of this puzzle. As that plant ramps up operations, industry analysts expect Samsung Foundry to return to profitability by 2027, according to the Chosun Daily. That would mark a significant turnaround for a division that's been struggling to gain traction against TSMC's manufacturing dominance.
But let's be clear about the competitive landscape here. Taiwan Semiconductor controlled 70.2% of the global foundry market in the second quarter, according to TrendForce. Samsung? Just 7.3%. That's a massive gap, and even with impressive production increases, Samsung has a long way to go before it becomes a true peer competitor. Still, momentum matters, and Samsung is building some.
Meanwhile, Samsung is capitalizing on its memory business in a big way. The company has raised prices on key memory chips by up to 60% since September, taking advantage of panic ordering and a global shortage driven by AI data center demand. Samsung expects the shortage to continue, giving it sustained pricing power heading into next year.
The financial impact is already showing up. Samsung forecasts 12.1 trillion won (roughly $8.5 billion) in operating profit for the September quarter, up 31.8% year-over-year. Revenue is expected to climb 8.7% to a record 86 trillion won—the company's strongest performance in more than three years. The drivers are straightforward: high prices and tight supply in both Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM) and NAND.
Analysts see this earnings momentum continuing as Samsung ramps up high-bandwidth memory shipments and targets commercialization of HBM4 in 2026. The company was reportedly aiming for additional contract price increases of 40-50% in the fourth quarter, which tells you something about how tight the supply situation remains.
So what does all this mean? Samsung is making a legitimate run at narrowing the technological gap with Taiwan Semiconductor. The production capacity expansion is real, the customer wins are significant, and the yield improvements suggest the company has worked through some of its earlier manufacturing challenges. But turning that into sustained market share gains against a competitor with TSMC's scale and track record? That's the harder part, and it'll take more than one strong year to prove Samsung can do it consistently.
Price Action: TSM shares were trading lower by 0.68% to $273.19 premarket at last check Monday.