Samsung Electronics is seeing its stock advance as artificial intelligence demand continues to reshape global electronics supply chains.
The surge in AI infrastructure investment has created a ripple effect across memory chips, substrates, and advanced electronic components, tightening supply and pushing up production costs.
This shift has contributed to Samsung’s unusual decision to raise prices on already-released devices, including the Galaxy S25 Edge, higher-capacity Galaxy Z Fold7 and Flip7 models, as well as select Galaxy Tab tablets. Phone prices have increased by roughly 100,000 to 200,000 won (about US$130), while tablets have risen by 30,000 to 130,000 won (about US$86).
Samsung SDI Co., Ltd., 0L2T.L
Unlike its traditional pricing strategy, where adjustments typically occur during new product launches, Samsung has implemented mid-cycle price increases across existing devices. This reflects growing pressure from rising input costs rather than product upgrades or demand surges alone.
The move signals how deeply cost inflation is affecting consumer electronics manufacturers. Suppliers such as STMicroelectronics, Murata Manufacturing, and Kingboard Laminates Group have already raised prices, with further increases expected across the broader supply chain.
For investors, this shift is notable because it highlights Samsung’s willingness to preserve margins even in a competitive smartphone market by passing higher costs onto consumers.
Behind the price adjustments is a broader escalation in raw material expenses. Printed circuit boards (PCBs), which form the backbone of modern electronic devices, are becoming increasingly expensive. Materials such as gold and copper-clad laminates (CCL), essential for circuit board production, now account for nearly half of total raw material costs in some cases.
In South Korea, potassium gold cyanide, a key gold-plating chemical used in electronic substrates, has nearly doubled in price compared to 2023 levels as of the third quarter of 2025. At the same time, electronics manufacturers are facing mid-to-high single-digit percentage increases in CCL procurement costs year-on-year, placing further strain on production budgets.
These cost pressures are not isolated but part of a wider inflationary trend affecting the entire electronics ecosystem.
The rapid expansion of AI infrastructure is also redirecting semiconductor supply away from consumer electronics. According to industry research, memory suppliers are increasingly allocating production capacity toward high-margin enterprise AI workloads rather than smartphones and tablets.
This shift has led to tighter availability in consumer memory markets, even as some retail pricing shows short-term fluctuations. Contract pricing from major memory manufacturers has remained stable in certain regions, but long-term expectations still point toward sustained upward pressure due to persistent demand from AI data centers.
Research firms such as TrendForce suggest that these capacity reallocations will continue to support elevated pricing levels, particularly in memory and advanced chip segments.
Despite rising input costs, Samsung’s stock performance indicates that investors may be focusing on the company’s ability to maintain pricing power in a constrained supply environment. By raising device prices, Samsung is attempting to offset margin compression caused by expensive components and supply chain bottlenecks.
Competitors such as Dell, HP, and Sony are also reportedly facing similar cost pressures, reinforcing the idea that this is an industry-wide trend rather than a company-specific issue.
For now, the market appears to view Samsung’s pricing strategy as a defensive but necessary response to an evolving AI-driven semiconductor landscape. If AI demand continues to accelerate, further cost increases across consumer electronics may become the new norm rather than an exception.
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