South Korea is racing to lock in its lead in the global chip race, with President Lee Jae-myung ordering government officials to fast-track semiconductor and AI projects worth more than $650 billion.
South Korea is racing to lock in its lead in the global chip race, with President Lee Jae-myung ordering government officials to fast-track semiconductor and AI projects worth more than $650 billion.

South Korean President Lee Jae-myung on Monday ordered government officials to accelerate semiconductor and AI project timelines, declaring that speed alone will determine the winner in the intensifying global chip race.
"In this situation, the outcome will be decided by who moves faster and who seizes the lead first," Lee said at a government meeting. "Speed is the only thing that matters."
The directive follows last week's announcement of South Korea's largest-ever semiconductor and AI investment plan, targeting 1,000 trillion won ($650 billion) in AI data center spending by 2035 and 81 trillion won ($53 billion) for chip packaging factories in the Chungcheong region. The plan positions semiconductors, physical AI, and AI data centers as the "three pillars" of South Korea's industrial upgrade, with the government aiming to become a "dominant nation in the AI revolution."
The policy push directly benefits Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, the two domestic chip giants that account for the bulk of South Korea's semiconductor output. On June 29, the companies announced a combined public-private investment commitment of roughly 800 trillion won ($520 billion) for new fabrication plants and expanded high-bandwidth memory capacity — the core memory technology powering Nvidia's AI accelerators. The tax windfall from the chip boom is also fueling government coffers: a projected surplus of 50 trillion won to 70 trillion won ($34 billion to $46 billion) in 2026 alone, which Seoul is debating whether to channel into a Future Response Fund for strategic industries or a sovereign wealth fund slated for the second half of 2026.
What the speed mandate means for project timelines
Lee's emphasis on execution speed compresses what would normally be multi-year approval cycles for semiconductor facilities. South Korea's chip industry has historically faced bottlenecks in land allocation, environmental permitting, and power grid connections — delays that can push fab construction past the point of market relevance in an industry where a single quarter's delay can cost billions in lost orders.
The Chungcheong packaging cluster, budgeted at 81 trillion won, is particularly time-sensitive. Advanced packaging — the process of stacking and connecting chips using technologies like TSMC's CoWoS (chip-on-wafer-on-substrate) — has become a critical bottleneck in AI chip production. Samsung and SK Hynix are both racing to expand their packaging capacity to capture demand from Nvidia, AMD, and other AI chip designers that rely on high-bandwidth memory stacks.
A separate proposal surfaced in July would carve out roughly 5 trillion won ($3.6 billion) from the tax surplus specifically for sovereign AI projects, including the acquisition of 10,000 advanced GPUs. That would give the South Korean government its own AI compute infrastructure, reducing reliance on private-sector cloud providers for national AI research initiatives.
Investment implications for global chip investors
For investors tracking semiconductor supply chains, the acceleration signals faster capacity expansion from the world's two largest memory chipmakers. Samsung and SK Hynix together control more than 70 percent of the global DRAM market and an even larger share of high-bandwidth memory, the premium-priced segment that has driven their recent earnings growth.
The policy also carries implications for equipment suppliers. Faster fab construction means earlier orders for wafer fabrication equipment from companies like ASML, Applied Materials, and Tokyo Electron, as well as packaging equipment from firms such as ASE Technology and Amkor Technology. South Korea's semiconductor equipment imports have already risen sharply this year as Samsung and SK Hynix ramp their capital expenditure plans.
The competitive framing is clear: South Korea is betting that aggressive state-backed investment can preserve its manufacturing edge against intensifying competition from Taiwan, the US, Japan, and China, all of which are pouring subsidies into domestic chip production. For Samsung and SK Hynix shareholders, the government's willingness to deploy tax surplus revenue as a strategic weapon reduces execution risk on the industry's largest-ever capital spending cycle.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.