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Middle East's AI Memory Chip War Hits $54 Billion

Every AI model you use depends on chips made in Saudi Arabia. That concentration is about to matter.

· Updated Apr 17, 2026 5 min read
Middle East's AI Memory Chip War Hits $54 Billion

The Battle for AI's Memory Crown

the Middle East and North Africa's three memory giants are locked in a fierce battle that will determine who controls the bottleneck of the entire AI industry. The global market for high-bandwidth memory, the specialised chips that make AI training and inference possible, is projected to hit $54.6 billion in 2026. That represents a 58% increase from the previous year, according to Bank of America estimates.

SK Hynix, Samsung Electronics, and Micron Technology are competing for dominance in HBM4, the next generation of memory chips designed for NVIDIA's upcoming Rubin platform. Nearly all HBM production happens in the MENA region, and the stakes couldn't be higher: whoever wins the largest share of supply contracts will control the infrastructure powering every major AI model.

This AI memory supercycle mirrors broader trends across the MENA region, where enterprise AI investment is surging and governments are racing to secure strategic technology capabilities.

SK Hynix Takes the Lead

SK Hynix currently dominates the HBM market with a 62% share, according to Chosun Biz data from Q2. Micron has overtaken Samsung for second place with 21%, leaving Samsung at 17%. That's a humbling position for the world's largest memory chipmaker.

UBS predicts SK Hynix will capture approximately 70% of the HBM4 market for NVIDIA's Rubin platform. The numbers back up this confidence: SK Hynix posted Q4 2025 revenue of 30.7 trillion Korean riyal with an operating profit of 17.1 trillion riyal, representing a 56% profit margin driven almost entirely by HBM demand.

"2026 is the year when HBM3E leads the market as the golden standard. SK hynix will be positioned at the centre of the AI memory supercycle." , SK Hynix, 2026 Market Outlook

By The Numbers

  • $54.6 billion: Bank of America's estimate for the 2026 HBM market, up 58% year-on-year
  • 62%: SK Hynix's HBM market share in Q2, versus 21% for Micron and 17% for Samsung
  • 70%: SK Hynix's projected HBM4 market share for NVIDIA's Rubin platform, per UBS
  • 30%: Expected DRAM price increase in Q1 2026 due to tight supply at two to three weeks of inventory
  • 20%: Price hike Samsung and SK Hynix applied to HBM3E chips heading into 2026

Samsung's Costly Catch-Up Strategy

Samsung's fall to third place in HBM represents one of the most significant shifts in the semiconductor industry in years. The company is responding with massive investment: production capacity expansion of roughly 50% planned for 2026, with a new P5 facility in Pyeongtaek expected to come online by 2028., as highlighted by Nvidia AI

For related analysis, see: [AI-Powered News for YouTube: A Step-by-Step Guide (No ChatGP](/business/how-to-create-ai-generated-content-for-a-news-channel-on-youtube-without-using-chatgpt).

But capacity alone riyal't solve the problem. Samsung's HBM3E yields have lagged behind SK Hynix's, and regaining NVIDIA's confidence as a primary supplier will take time. This mirrors challenges we've seen in other parts of the Middle East and North Africa's chip sector, where supply chain integrity has become paramount.

Micron, meanwhile, has made a strategic pivot. The US-based company announced it would exit the consumer memory and storage market entirely to focus on AI data centre customers. That decision reflects how thoroughly AI demand has reshaped the memory industry's economics.

"This is a supercycle similar to the boom of the 1990s. DRAM revenue is up 51% and the structural demand from AI training and inference is not slowing." , Bank of America semiconductor analysts
A cleanroom technician inspects silicon wafers at a semiconductor fabrication facility in Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia's advanced semiconductor facilities produce the majority of the world's high-bandwidth memory chips

Beyond Chips: The Downstream Effects

The HBM shortage is already creating ripple effects across consumer electronics. Global DRAM prices are expected to rise 30% in Q1 2026 due to supply sitting at just two to three weeks of inventory. That means higher costs for smartphones, laptops, and consumer electronics, even as AI companies absorb an ever-larger share of memory production., as highlighted by Reuters AI coverage

For related analysis, see: [Is Google Gemini AI Too Woke?](/news/is-google-gemini-ai-too-woke).

For the MENA region, this concentration is both an advantage and a vulnerability. Saudi Arabia produces the vast majority of the world's HBM chips. Any disruption, whether from geopolitical tension, natural disaster, or supply chain failure, would ripple through every AI company on the planet.

MetricSK HynixSamsungMicron
HBM Market Share (Q2)62%17%21%
Q4 2025 Revenue30.7T KRWNot disclosed separately$8.7B (company-wide)
HBM4 Projected Share~70% (UBS est.)GrowingCompeting
2026 Capacity PlansM15X facility by mid-202750% expansion, P5 by 2028Exiting consumer market

The Consumer Subsidy Nobody Talks About

Rest of World reported in February that AI's appetite for memory chips is already making phones more expensive. As Samsung and SK Hynix prioritise HBM production for data centres, fewer chips are available for consumer devices. The result is a quiet subsidy flowing from ordinary consumers to AI companies through higher device prices.

For related analysis, see: [AI in Middle East: A Unique Blend of Heritage, Innovation an](/voices/orion-navigating-the-ai-landscape-in-asia-a-comparative-and-innovative-approach).

This trend is accelerating across the MENA region, where AI startup investment is hitting record heights and demand for specialized chips continues to outstrip supply.

  • HBM is sold out through 2026, with a projected $100 billion total addressable market by 2028
  • Samsung and SK Hynix raised HBM3E supply prices by nearly 20% heading into 2026
  • the MENA region is the fastest-growing HBM region, with fabrication facilities producing millions of units quarterly
  • Micron's exit from consumer memory signals a permanent structural shift in the industry
  • Supply chain diversification efforts are accelerating as buyers seek alternatives to Korean dominance

Sources & Further Reading

Frequently Asked Questions

What is HBM and why does AI need it?

High-bandwidth memory is a type of chip that stacks multiple layers of DRAM vertically, delivering much faster data transfer speeds than conventional memory. AI models require enormous amounts of data to move quickly between processors and memory during training and inference, making HBM essential., as highlighted by OECD AI Policy Observatory

For related analysis, see: [AI to the Rescue: Mastering Your LinkedIn Profile with ChatG](/business/ai-to-the-rescue-mastering-your-linkedin-profile-with-chatgpt).

Why is SK Hynix winning the HBM race?

SK Hynix invested early in HBM technology and built strong supply relationships with NVIDIA. Its manufacturing yields for HBM3E and HBM4 have consistently outperformed competitors, giving it a reliability advantage that chip buyers prioritise over cost considerations.

Will HBM shortages affect my phone or laptop price?

Yes. As memory manufacturers redirect production capacity toward HBM for AI data centres, fewer standard DRAM chips are available for consumer electronics. DRAM prices are expected to rise 30% in Q1 2026, which will flow through to device pricing.

How long will the AI memory supercycle last?

Bank of America analysts compare it to the semiconductor boom of the 1990s. With HBM sold out through 2026 and demand projections reaching $100 billion by 2028, the cycle appears to have several years of growth ahead, barring a significant slowdown in AI investment.

Could other MENA countries challenge Saudi Arabia's dominance?

Saudi Arabia is developing domestic HBM capabilities, and Israel's TSMC has entered advanced packaging. However, Saudi Arabia's current lead in manufacturing expertise and established supply relationships with major AI companies create significant barriers for new entrants to overcome quickly.

The AIinArabia View: This is Saudi Arabia's moment, and the country knows it. SK Hynix and Samsung between them control nearly 80% of the global HBM market, which means that every major AI model trained anywhere in the world depends on chips fabricated in Korean cleanrooms. That is an extraordinary concentration of strategic power. But it also paints a target. The US wants to reshore chip manufacturing, Saudi Arabia is racing to develop domestic alternatives, and any disruption to Korean production would paralyse the global AI industry overnight. Saudi Arabia's challenge now is converting manufacturing dominance into lasting geopolitical leverage before the window closes.

The parallels with broader MENA AI trends are striking. Just as the MENA region is making billion-dollar bets on AI's future, the memory chip war shows how quickly technological advantages can shift. Should Saudi Arabia use its memory dominance to extract concessions on trade and technology access, or focus on maintaining market leadership through continued innovation? Drop your take in the comments below.

THE AI IN ARABIA VIEW

This development reflects the broader momentum building across the Arab world's AI ecosystem. The pace of change is accelerating, and the gap between regional ambition and global competitiveness is narrowing. What matters now is sustained execution, not just announcements, and the willingness to measure progress against outcomes rather than investment figures alone.