Samsung’s semiconductor division reportedly posted massive Q1 profits while the company’s phone division faces potential losses. The culprit? AI’s ravenous appetite for memory is devouring smartphone economics from the inside out.
Memory components now dominate manufacturing costs in ways that would make previous generations of engineers weep. Industry forecasts suggest RAM could comprise over 33% of budget phone costs by mid-2026, with flagships seeing 20% or more. Your grandfather’s Nokia brick suddenly looks like a bargain when AI infrastructure consumes smartphone components at unprecedented scale.
The Great Memory Squeeze
AI infrastructure consumes smartphone components at unprecedented scale.
The math gets uglier when you zoom out. Major fabs have reportedly pivoted away from conventional memory production to focus on High Bandwidth Memory and enterprise-grade components for AI servers. Samsung’s response? Phase out older memory production entirely to feed the AI beast. Memory prices have surged significantly throughout 2026.
Samsung’s Mobile Experience leadership has reportedly expressed concerns about the division’s profitability despite strong sales performance. The economics have flipped entirely: processors and displays once dominated component costs, but memory now rules the bill of materials.
Your Wallet Feels the Pinch
Price hikes spread across budget to premium smartphone tiers.
Phone makers are passing costs straight to consumers faster than a TikTok trend. Samsung’s Galaxy S25 models and premium foldables carry reported price increases of $50-80. Budget phone manufacturers face similar pressures. Even entry-level devices aren’t safe from what amounts to an “AI tax” on everyday technology.
Industry predictions suggest memory supply constraints could persist through 2027. That gap means your next phone upgrade will cost more, perform similarly, and compete with data centers for the same silicon components.
The Internal Contradiction
Record semiconductor profits contrast sharply with mobile division struggles.
Samsung’s internal contradiction reveals tech industry priorities in stark relief: booming profits from AI infrastructure while consumer devices become collateral damage. The company benefits massively from memory demand in one division while another division faces unprecedented cost pressures from AI chips.
Your smartphone just became an afterthought in the race to build tomorrow’s digital infrastructure. The question isn’t whether prices will rise—it’s how much consumers will tolerate before seeking alternatives or delaying upgrades entirely.




























