South Korea

Intelligence for Better Decision Making

TSMC and Samsung Accelerate 2 nm Chip Production Amid Intensifying AI Market Demand
Dec. 2, 2025 | Technology & Innovation

Leading semiconductor manufacturers are boosting production capacity and deploying advanced chip technologies to meet growing AI and high-performance computing demands.

**TSMC is ramping up its 2-nanometer fabrication capacity from seven to ten fabs in the Southern Taiwan Science Park, fueled by a roughly NT$900 billion investment.**
Surging demand for AI and high-performance computing chips—especially GPUs and CPUs for AI servers—drives the company to target requirements of the early 2030s. About 70 percent of TSMC’s US$40–42 billion capital expenditure in 2025 will go to advanced 2 nm and 3 nm processes. Domestic political pressures reinforce TSMC’s decision to keep its most advanced production facilities in Taiwan.

**Despite this ramp-up, supply constraints and higher pricing challenge TSMC’s 2 nm business.**
Its 2 nm chips cost at least 50 percent more than 3 nm devices, prompting some fabless companies to explore alternative suppliers. Samsung stands to gain customers seeking leading-edge production that offers more favorable pricing or availability.

**Samsung Electronics reports that its 2 nm process yields have climbed to 55–60 percent, approaching the level needed for viable mass production.**
Tesla, under a long-term contract for next-generation AI5 and AI6 chips, and Samsung’s own Exynos 2600 mobile application processor serve as key validation platforms to further boost yields. Samsung plans to start full-scale 2 nm manufacturing at its new Taylor, Texas, facility and integrate the technology into its flagship Galaxy S26 smartphone in 2026.

**Alongside its 2 nm efforts, Samsung has merged its dedicated high-bandwidth memory (HBM) development task force into the broader DRAM Development Office, consolidating process, design, and advanced packaging functions.**
This reorganization supports a unified memory strategy focused on HBM4 and HBM4E production and aligns with the upcoming Pyeongtaek P5 “AI mega fab.” That facility will co-locate HBM4/5 production alongside 3 nm and 2 nm foundry operations and advanced packaging, with the HBM design team centrally connecting foundry and packaging activities.

**Over the next two to three years, TSMC and Samsung will intensify their competition around production capacity, process yields, design support, pricing, and infrastructure development.**
The result of this contest will shape availability and costs of leading-edge semiconductor technologies, particularly in AI and high-bandwidth memory applications.
OpenAI’s High-Stakes Expansion Amid Surging AI Integration and Intensifying Competition
Dec. 2, 2025 | Competitiveness

The rapid evolution of artificial intelligence is transforming industries from search to education and testing the resilience of major developers.

**Since marking its third anniversary, ChatGPT has deepened AI integration across search, translation, coding, customer service and education.**
AI has emerged as a transformative platform that reshapes industrial structures and work dynamics. OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT, confronts rising operational costs, fierce global competition and ongoing controversies over user safety and ethics.

**OpenAI has funded its rapid growth with massive investments in large-scale data centers and aggressive expansion strategies, yet it continues to run a substantial deficit.**
HSBC predicts annual revenue will climb from $12.5 billion in 2025 to $213.6 billion by 2030, while operating losses may widen to $76.5 billion. Key cost drivers include a revenue-sharing agreement with Microsoft, high costs of goods sold, extensive research and development expenditures and significant administrative expenses. Contracts with Microsoft and Amazon for cloud computing capacity total $250 billion and $38 billion, respectively, and could reach a cumulative $1.8 trillion. As infrastructure builds accelerate, annual data center rental costs could approach $620 billion.

**To support projected demand, OpenAI plans to invest $18 billion in the Stargate Project, partnering with SoftBank and Oracle to build five new AI data centers and secure 250 GW of capacity by 2033.**
Achieving financial sustainability depends on growing the user base to roughly 3 billion by 2030 to offset soaring infrastructure and operational expenses. Nvidia GPU–based servers require substantial power and physical space, further intensifying cost pressures.

**Competition in the AI sector is intensifying as rivals develop alternative hardware and models.**
Google is preparing Gemini 3, which will run on its proprietary Tensor Processing Units and aim to outperform GPU-based systems in speed, energy efficiency and multimodal tasks. Meta is reportedly evaluating Google’s TPUs over Nvidia GPUs. Industry experts expect future competition to hinge more on data center architecture, power efficiency and cost-effective computation than on model accuracy alone, making OpenAI’s reliance on Nvidia GPUs a potential vulnerability.

**OpenAI also faces controversies around user safety and content moderation.**
Lawsuits claim ChatGPT content contributed to harmful outcomes, including a teenage suicide; OpenAI rejects legal responsibility but acknowledges inherent risks in human-AI interactions. After its GPT-4–powered Kuma AI teddy bear provided inappropriate information to minors, OpenAI suspended the product. Meanwhile, the company plans to introduce adult content features with age and identity verification, a strategy analysts link to efforts to diversify revenue through premium subscription tiers.

Monitored Intelligence for South Korea - Dec. 3, 2025


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Erudite Risk takes an all risks approach to intelligence reporting. We categorize key intelligence into one of 40 different risk intelligence categories.

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Family members of Jeju Air crash victims shave heads in protest over credibility of interim probe results

Yonhap | English | News | Dec. 3, 2025 | Accidents

Family members of victims from the December 2024 Jeju Air plane crash protested on December 1, 2025, by shaving their heads to express their distrust in the government's interim investigation results. The crash, which occurred at Muan International Airport, resulted in 179 deaths. The protest took place outside the presidential office in central Seoul as the transport ministry's investigation committee prepared to hold a two-day hearing to announce interim findings.

The families and affiliated civic groups accused the committee of a lack of transparency, criticizing it for conducting a "self-investigation" that blocked information. They demanded an independent investigation led by a body under the prime minister instead of one under the transport ministry, which oversees aviation policy, arguing this presents a conflict of interest. During the protest, several participants clashed with police and attempted to enter the presidential office to meet President Lee Jae Myung. The group plans further overnight rallies until the day of the hearing.

"콜센터, AI 때문에 사라질 직업 아냐…노란봉투법 때문에 존립 위기"

Call centers are not jobs that will disappear because of AI… Their existence is threatened because of the Yellow Envelope Act

Hankyung | Local Language | News | Dec. 3, 2025 | Regulation

Sohn Young-deuk, chairman of KS Korea Employment Information, explains that AI is supplementing the call center industry by addressing chronic labor shortages rather than replacing jobs. He predicts that within five years, call center counselors will evolve into customer experience (CX) consultants who manage AI systems, leading to salaries more than doubling due to increased expertise and productivity. His company, which developed the AI contact center platform C-Hive, supports a hybrid model where AI handles simple inquiries and human counselors manage complex issues. Despite challenges like strikes and data leaks, KS Korea Employment Information’s sales and profits have grown significantly.

Sohn highlights demand for AI-enabled call centers in sectors such as finance, e-commerce, healthcare, insurance, and public services, where complex and privacy-sensitive inquiries require human expertise supported by AI. He also outlines plans to enter the medical tourism market by creating transparent customer management platforms connecting Chinese patients to Korean hospitals, aiming to reduce broker fees and improve service quality.

However, the survival of call centers is now more threatened by the upcoming Yellow Envelope Act, which requires subcontractor unions to negotiate directly with prime contractors. Sohn warns this could cause principal companies to cut contracts or accelerate AI automation to avoid risk. He recalls a past incident at KS Korea Employment Information’s Chuncheon center, where aggressive union demands, including a 20% wage increase and emotional labor allowances, led to strikes, client loss, and a drastic reduction in employees from 1,000 to 100. While employment has partially recovered, Sohn cautions that similar labor conflicts under the new law could disrupt the industry. He emphasizes the need for labor-management coexistence to navigate the changes brought by AI.

Korean companies cut back for 2026 due to global slowdown

Joongang Ilbo | English | News | Dec. 3, 2025 | UndeterminedOperating Results

Korean companies are shifting their 2026 business strategies from expansion to maintenance and cost-cutting amid a global economic slowdown and increasing regulatory pressures. According to a Korea Enterprises Federation (KEF) survey of 229 companies, over 70 percent plan either to maintain current operations or tighten them, with only 29.1 percent aiming to expand. Workforce optimization, including headcount reductions, has become the primary cost-cutting measure for the first time since 2017.

Several sectors, including petrochemicals, steel, home appliances, telecommunications, and retail, have initiated restructuring efforts this year, offering voluntary retirement to improve profitability. Hiring plans reflect the cautious mood, with over half of surveyed companies maintaining current hiring levels, while 41 percent of large firms plan to reduce recruitment. Data from sustainability reports also show a significant decline in new hires among major Korean firms over the past two years.

Investment plans reveal a preference for maintaining or reducing domestic investments, especially among larger firms, while overseas investment, particularly in Southeast Asia and the United States, is expected to increase. President Lee Jae Myung has expressed concern about the imbalance favoring foreign over domestic investment and urged a more balanced approach. Rising domestic costs, new labor regulations, and proposed amendments to the Commercial Act are cited as factors pushing companies toward defensive strategies. Experts emphasize the need for minimizing regulatory burdens and implementing labor market reforms to encourage investment and hiring within Korea.

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