South Korea's crown jewel conglomerate — the world's largest memory-chip maker, #1 smartphone vendor, and OLED display king. A $233B-revenue titan navigating the AI era.
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. is the flagship subsidiary of the Samsung Group, South Korea's largest chaebol. The company operates across three mega-divisions: Device Solutions (DS) covering semiconductors and displays; Device eXperience (DX) encompassing mobile, TV, and home appliances; and Harman handling automotive and connected technology.
Samsung is simultaneously the world's #1 smartphone vendor by volume, the #1 memory-chip manufacturer (DRAM and NAND), the #1 OLED panel producer, and a top-3 semiconductor foundry. This vertically integrated structure — designing chips, screens, and devices — gives it unique supply-chain leverage rivaled only by Apple's ecosystem approach.
The company is publicly traded on the Korea Exchange under ticker 005930. Its 52-week range as of late February 2026 spans â‚©52,500 to â‚©223,000, reflecting enormous volatility tied to AI-chip cycles and geopolitical tensions.
Samsung posted its highest-ever annual revenue of â‚©333.61 trillion ($233.3B), up 10.9% year-over-year. Operating profit surged 33.2% to â‚©43.60 trillion ($30.5B), and net income rose 31.2% to â‚©45.21 trillion. Q4 alone delivered record quarterly revenue of â‚©93.8 trillion, up 24% YoY and 9% QoQ.
| Division | Revenue | Operating Profit |
|---|---|---|
| Memory (DS) | ~â‚©30T | AI-driven surge; HBM sold out |
| MX & Networks (DX) | â‚©29.3T | â‚©1.9T |
| Display (SDC) | â‚©8.1T (Q3) | â‚©2T+ (Q4, doubled YoY) |
| Foundry (DS) | Improving | Still in recovery; 2nm ramp underway |
Samsung's Mobile eXperience (MX) division achieved double-digit annual profit in 2025, anchored by the Galaxy S25 series and bolstered by the new Galaxy S26 series announced at Galaxy Unpacked 2026 (February 2026).
Launched in January 2025 at $1,299, the S25 Ultra was widely praised as "one of the best phones you can buy in 2025" (multiple reviewers). Key upgrades included Snapdragon 8 Elite, a refined titanium frame design, and what CNET called the "greatest phone screen ever." However, critics noted:
Unveiled at Galaxy Unpacked 2026 in late February, Samsung positioned the S26 as "The Beginning of Truly Agentic AI." The event introduced AI agents capable of multi-step autonomous tasks across Samsung's ecosystem. The Galaxy Buds4 series also debuted with a refreshed Blade design and enhanced audio.
Samsung's Device Solutions (DS) division is the beating heart of its profit engine, encompassing both memory chips and foundry services. The AI boom has transformed this division's fortunes.
Samsung held 35% of the global HBM market in Q3 2025 (Counterpoint), behind SK Hynix at 53% but ahead of Micron at 11%. After beginning Nvidia HBM shipments in Q3 2025, Samsung sold out its entire 2026 HBM allocation. The company plans to boost production to ~250,000 wafers/month by end-2026, a 47% increase from 170,000.
Focus has shifted to HBM4, Samsung's next-generation offering with differentiated performance. Customers have reportedly praised HBM4's competitiveness, and Samsung aims for mass production in 2026.
Samsung began mass production of 2nm Gate-All-Around (GAA) chips in Q4 2025, making it the first foundry to achieve this milestone. In 2026, the focus is on stable supply of 2nm products and HBM4 base-dies. The Taylor, Texas fab is also slated to begin operations in 2026.
Samsung Display Corporation (SDC) dominates the global OLED panel market and remains the single most important supplier for smartphone screens worldwide.
According to UBI Research, Samsung Display held the #1 position in the 2025 OLED market with 38% by shipments and a commanding 48% by revenue — reflecting its premium pricing power. SDC posted ₩8.1 trillion in Q3 2025 revenue, and Q4 display profits more than doubled to ₩2 trillion, fueled by robust demand from smartphone OEMs.
In OLED TVs, Samsung Electronics sold approximately 2 million units in 2025 (+38% YoY), capturing 31% market share as the world's #2 OLED TV maker behind LG Electronics. Samsung offers both QD-OLED (Samsung Display) and WOLED (LG Display) panels in its TV lineup.
Samsung has bet heavily on AI as its unifying product narrative, branding its on-device intelligence suite Galaxy AI. As of March 2026, Galaxy AI's Photo Assist, Creative Studio, and Writing Assist support 41 languages.
Samsung Electronics operates under a dual-CEO structure as of November 2025:
| Name | Title | Division |
|---|---|---|
| Young Hyun Jun | Vice Chairman & Co-CEO | Device Solutions (DS) |
| TM Roh (Roh Tae-moon) | Co-CEO | Device eXperience (DX) |
| Jay Y. Lee (Lee Jae-yong) | Executive Chairman, Samsung Group | Overall Group Strategy |
TM Roh's elevation to co-CEO in November 2025 signaled Samsung's commitment to the consumer-device business amid the AI transition. Previously Head of Mobile, Roh now oversees the entire DX division. Vice Chairman Jun continues to steer the critical semiconductor and foundry operations during the AI boom.
Jay Y. Lee remains the de facto leader of the Samsung conglomerate, though his role is more strategic than operational. His legal history (bribery conviction, presidential pardon) continues to shadow the company's governance narrative.
Samsung's chairman faced bribery charges related to succession plans and political corruption. While pardoned in 2022, he publicly apologized and pledged not to hand management to his children. An anti-corruption panel headed by a former Supreme Court judge was established, but governance concerns persist.
In November 2025, researchers reported that budget Samsung phones shipped with unremovable data-gathering software, reigniting privacy controversies. The issue went viral on X (formerly Twitter) and drew coverage from Malwarebytes and security researchers.
Crosner Legal filed a class action against Samsung Electronics America in May 2025, alleging deceptive marketing practices and violations of Washington's consumer protection laws.
In November 2025, Samsung and Google issued urgent update warnings over a critical Android system vulnerability enabling remote code execution — affecting over 1 billion users. The patch cycle for older Samsung devices remained slower than competitors.
Ethical Consumer gave Samsung poor marks across climate change, workers' rights, tech sustainability, conflict minerals, and tax conduct categories in their 2025 assessment.
Based on analysis of Reddit communities (r/samsung, r/samsunggalaxy, r/oneui, r/Android) and tech forums throughout 2025–2026:
| Arena | Key Competitors | Samsung's Position |
|---|---|---|
| Smartphones | Apple, Xiaomi, Oppo/Vivo, Google | #1 volume globally; #2 in revenue (behind Apple) |
| Memory (DRAM/NAND) | SK Hynix, Micron | #1 overall; #2 in HBM (behind SK Hynix) |
| Foundry | TSMC, Intel Foundry | #2 by capacity; technology gap vs. TSMC persists |
| OLED Displays | LG Display, BOE, Tianma | #1 by revenue (48%) and shipments (38%) |
| TVs | LG, TCL, Hisense, Sony | #1 TV brand globally; #2 in OLED TVs |
| AI / Software | Apple Intelligence, Google Gemini | Early mover with Galaxy AI but execution gaps |
As of late February 2026, analyst consensus ranges from ₩140,000 (bear) to ₩340,000 (bull), with the stock trading around ₩216,000–₩223,000. The wide range reflects uncertainty over foundry profitability and HBM execution timing.
Last Updated: March 22, 2026
Samsung is the everything company — phones, TVs, refrigerators, semiconductors, displays, SSDs. The sheer breadth of Samsung's manufacturing empire is staggering, and the vertical integration gives them cost advantages that most competitors can only dream of. Galaxy phones remain the primary Android alternative to Apple, and the foldable line is genuinely innovative.
But Samsung's semiconductor division is struggling at the worst possible time. While TSMC and even Intel are racing to build advanced chip fabs, Samsung's foundry yields have been disappointing, and they're losing ground in the HBM (high-bandwidth memory) race critical for AI chips. In a world where AI infrastructure is the biggest growth opportunity, Samsung is falling behind.
The phone business is a mature market share game — Samsung isn't going to dramatically grow in smartphones. The real question is whether the component businesses (memory, displays, foundry) can capture enough AI-era demand to drive the next growth cycle. The pieces are there, but the execution needs to improve dramatically.