Source: International Business Times
As artificial intelligence demand drives the global semiconductor industry toward a trillion-dollar scale in 2026, three Asian powerhouses — Taiwan's TSMC, South Korea's Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix — are locked in a high-stakes contest that will largely determine who controls the critical infrastructure powering the AI revolution. TSMC dominates advanced logic chip manufacturing, Samsung is mounting an aggressive comeback in both memory and foundry, and SK Hynix currently leads the crucial high-bandwidth memory segment that serves as the lifeblood of AI accelerators. While no single winner has emerged, the battle lines are clearly drawn around two key battlegrounds: cutting-edge process technology for AI processors and high-speed memory that prevents data bottlenecks in massive training clusters.