The Memory Chokepoint: Korea's HBM Monopoly and the Allied Bottleneck Behind Every AI Chip
Two Korean companies produce ~79% of the world's HBM. Every AI GPU requires it. The US has zero domestic production.
Everyone models Taiwan risk. The CHIPS Act funds new fabs in Arizona. Intel is rebuilding. TSMC is diversifying. But the chip inside every AI server does not begin at a foundry. It begins at a memory plant in South Korea, where two companies—SK Hynix and Samsung—produce approximately 79% of the world's HBM (High Bandwidth Memory), the binding constraint on every AI GPU shipping today.[1]
HBM is not ordinary memory. It is a precision-stacked structure—8 to 16 DRAM dies bonded vertically with through-silicon vias (TSVs)—that delivers the bandwidth AI processors require. Every NVIDIA H100, B200, and forthcoming Rubin GPU requires HBM. No alternative memory technology performs at the required bandwidth. The HBM market reached approximately $35 billion in 2025 and is projected to hit $54.6 billion in 2026, growing approximately 58% year-over-year.[2]
This analysis maps the three-layer dependency chain that underpins AI infrastructure: Korean memory, Taiwanese packaging, Japanese sole-source materials. Each layer is controlled by allied nations. Each layer has no redundancy. A disruption at any layer cascades through the other two.
The US is building fabs in Arizona to reduce Taiwan dependency. The HBM inside those fabs comes from Korea. The underfill inside that HBM comes from Japan. The qualification walls between layers mean no amount of money solves this in under three years.Why This Matters Now
- HBM demand is accelerating. Bank of America projects the HBM market will grow 58% year-over-year to $54.6 billion in 2026, reaching $100 billion by 2028.[2] Micron's HBM capacity is fully sold out through calendar year 2026.
- Korean memory margins now exceed TSMC. In Q4 2025, SK Hynix and Samsung memory divisions achieved gross margins of 63–67%, surpassing TSMC's 60%—the first time in seven years.[3] AI memory is now more profitable than AI logic fabrication.
- The only US HBM producer makes its chips in Japan and packages them in Taiwan. Micron holds approximately 21% HBM market share but fabricates HBM wafers in Hiroshima, Japan, and packages them in Taichung, Taiwan.[4] No HBM is manufactured or packaged in the United States today.
- Micron exited consumer memory entirely. In December 2025, Micron announced it would discontinue the Crucial consumer brand to focus entirely on AI and HBM—signaling that even the US player views this bottleneck as the only market that matters.[5]
- Korea's semiconductor concentration is systemic. Semiconductors represent approximately 24–30% of South Korea's monthly exports (24.4% for full-year 2025), creating a feedback loop where Korea's economic health depends on AI memory demand.[6]
The Memory Chokepoint Nobody Is Modeling
The AI infrastructure buildout that dominates technology investment discourse—NVIDIA GPUs, datacenter expansion, foundation model training—runs through a single memory technology that three companies produce and two countries dominate.
SK Hynix, headquartered in Icheon, South Korea, holds approximately 57% of the global HBM market as of Q3 2025.[1] The company pioneered the MR-MUF (Mass Reflow Molded Underfill) process—a proprietary bonding technique that provides superior thermal performance and yield at high stack counts. Approximately 90% of NVIDIA's HBM supply comes from SK Hynix, making it the single most critical input supplier for the most valuable AI hardware company on earth.[7]
Samsung holds approximately 22% of the HBM market, up from 17% in Q2 2025 after finally passing NVIDIA's HBM3E qualification in September 2025—following an 18-month setback caused by heat and power consumption failures across multiple qualification attempts.[8] Samsung uses a different bonding approach, TC-NCF (Thermo-Compression Non-Conductive Film), which avoids the Namics underfill dependency but carries its own qualification challenges.
Micron, the only non-Korean HBM producer, holds approximately 21% market share—stable across both quarters.[1] But Micron is a US company in name only when it comes to HBM geography: its HBM wafers are fabricated in Hiroshima, Japan, and packaged at its AATT (Advanced Assembly and Test Taiwan) facility in Taichung.[4] A new $9.6 billion HBM-dedicated fab in Hiroshima will not begin shipping until 2028. No US-based HBM production exists today, and none is planned before 2028 at the earliest.
The only US company that produces HBM fabricates its memory in Japan and packages it in Taiwan. There are zero HBM manufacturing facilities in the United States.Explore the full supply chain intelligence graph
The Three-Layer Chokepoint
HBM does not reach an AI server as a standalone product. It passes through three allied-nation chokepoints in sequence, each with its own concentration risk and qualification wall.
Layer 1: Korean Memory (HBM Production)
SK Hynix and Samsung produce approximately 79% of global HBM in facilities concentrated in South Korea.[1] Their geographic co-location means a single regional event—geopolitical, natural, or economic—threatens the majority of global HBM supply simultaneously. The mutual dependency on NVIDIA as the dominant buyer creates additional fragility: approximately 90% of NVIDIA's HBM comes from SK Hynix alone.[7]
Layer 2: Taiwanese Packaging (CoWoS)
Once HBM dies are produced in Korea, they must be integrated with GPU dies through advanced packaging—specifically TSMC's CoWoS (Chip-on-Wafer-on-Substrate) process. TSMC is the near-exclusive provider of CoWoS packaging for NVIDIA AI GPUs, with approximately 60% of its CoWoS capacity booked by NVIDIA through 2027.[9]
Current CoWoS capacity is approximately 75,000–80,000 wafers per month as of early 2026, ramping toward a target of 120,000–130,000 wafers per month by late 2026.[10] Even at this expanded capacity, demand exceeds supply. TSMC has outsourced overflow to OSAT (Outsourced Semiconductor Assembly and Test) partners: Amkor receives 180,000–190,000 wafers annually, and SPIL (part of ASE Group) receives 60,000–80,000 wafers annually.[10]
Every wafer processed at TSMC's Arizona fabs is currently shipped back to Taiwan for dicing, testing, and CoWoS integration.[11] Amkor is building a $2 billion advanced packaging facility near TSMC's Arizona site, but production is not expected until 2028.[12] The "all-American chip"—fabricated and packaged domestically—is at least three years away.
Layer 3: Japanese Materials (Sole-Source Inputs)
Both Korean HBM production and Taiwanese packaging depend on Japanese sole-source materials—creating the deepest and least-visible layer of the dependency chain.
This three-layer structure means that a disruption at any single layer—Korean memory production, Taiwanese packaging, or Japanese materials—cascades through the other two. The qualification walls between layers (12–36 months for materials, 18+ months for HBM supplier qualification) mean that no amount of capital expenditure can create alternatives on any timeline relevant to current demand.
The Packaging Bottleneck
CoWoS advanced packaging is the binding constraint on AI GPU production through at least 2027. HBM compounds this: it consumes approximately three times the wafer capacity of DDR5 per gigabyte due to TSV (through-silicon via) technology, which requires drilling holes through silicon dies, filling them with copper, and precisely aligning multiple stacked layers.[13]
The practical consequence: every wafer allocated to an HBM stack for an NVIDIA GPU is a wafer denied to the LPDDR5X module of a mid-range smartphone or the SSD of a consumer laptop. HBM is eating conventional memory production capacity.
The equipment layer adds another qualification wall. The current bonding technology for HBM (thermo-compression bonding, or TCB) is approaching its physical limits. The semiconductor industry had expected HBM4 to transition to hybrid bonding—a fundamentally different approach using copper-to-copper direct bonding at sub-10-micrometer precision. However, JEDEC (the memory standards body) relaxed the HBM4 module height limit from 720 to 775 micrometers, providing enough headroom for HBM4 to continue using microbumps with TCB.[14] Hybrid bonding has been postponed to HBM4E or HBM5, expected at the end of the decade.
This delay matters for risk assessment: it means the current packaging technology and its supply chain dependencies will persist longer than previously assumed.
The Namics Problem
In our Japan allied dependency analysis, we described Coax Co.—a 30-person Japanese company that makes the microwave components without which quantum computing hardware cannot function. The Namics dependency in HBM is structurally identical but orders of magnitude more consequential.
Namics Corporation, a private Japanese company headquartered in Niigata, exclusively supplies the MR-MUF (Mass Reflow Molded Underfill) resin material used in all SK Hynix HBM production.[15] The exclusive contract has been in place for years, and TrendForce reports it is approaching expiration—a development that is influencing SK Hynix's technology roadmap decisions.[16]
A single private company in Niigata, Japan, exclusively supplies the underfill material inside every SK Hynix HBM chip. There is no second source.
Korean companies including LG Chem and Lotte Chemical are attempting to develop alternative underfill materials, but TrendForce reports these efforts are blocked by "20–30 years of accumulated data and customer trust."[15] Even if a Korean alternative were developed tomorrow, qualification would take years—during which SK Hynix's entire HBM output depends on continued Namics supply.
SK Hynix evaluated whether to switch to fluxless thermo-compression bonding for HBM4 16-high products—which would eliminate the Namics dependency—but ultimately decided to stick with MR-MUF, finding the alternative "premature" for production yield requirements.[16] This means the sole-source Namics dependency persists through the HBM4 generation.
Samsung avoided this specific vulnerability by adopting a different bonding approach (TC-NCF) from the start. But Samsung's lower market share and 18-month NVIDIA qualification setback demonstrate that alternative processes carry their own risks. The industry converged on SK Hynix's MR-MUF approach precisely because it delivers superior performance—and that approach depends on Namics.
The Equipment Layer
The machines that bond and stack HBM dies represent another layer of concentration. While equipment supply is less geographically concentrated than memory or materials, the precision requirements create narrow competitive fields.
The eventual transition from TCB to hybrid bonding—now expected for HBM4E or HBM5 rather than HBM4—will create a new qualification wall and reshuffle equipment dependencies. BESI and ASMPT are positioned as the leading contenders, with Korean manufacturers (Hanmi, Hanwha) racing to develop competitive tools.[17] TrendForce projects the hybrid bonder market could reach $2 billion by 2028.
The Storage Layer: NAND Meets AI
HBM is the primary memory bottleneck, but AI infrastructure also faces a secondary constraint in high-performance storage. AI datacenters require drives capable of feeding training data to GPUs at rates conventional SSDs cannot achieve.
The storage layer reinforces the Japan-Korea dependency pattern: Kioxia (Japan) and Solidigm (SK Hynix/Korea) are among the leading enterprise AI storage providers, while Western Digital/SanDisk rounds out the competitive landscape. The geographic concentration mirrors HBM—critical AI storage technology depends on the same allied-nation cluster.
The Stargate Effect: When $500 Billion Meets Finite Wafers
Everything described above—the Korean HBM duopoly, the Japanese sole-source materials, the Taiwanese packaging bottleneck—is a latent concentration risk. The Stargate Project is the demand shock that makes it active.
In January 2025, OpenAI, SoftBank, and Oracle announced Stargate: a $500 billion joint venture to build AI datacenter infrastructure across the United States, with an initial commitment of $100 billion.[22] Microsoft participates as technology partner (providing cloud infrastructure) but is not a co-founder of the joint venture itself. The project targets up to 10 gigawatts of AI compute capacity—roughly the peak electricity consumption of New York City.
In October 2025, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman signed letters of intent with Samsung and SK Hynix for approximately 900,000 DRAM wafers per month—representing roughly 40% of total global DRAM production capacity.[23] The deal structure grants Stargate priority allocation (not exclusive rights) on memory output from both Korean producers.
| Wafer commitment | ~900,000 DRAM wafers/month (LOIs signed Oct 2025) |
| Share of global output | ~40% of total DRAM production capacity |
| Suppliers | Samsung + SK Hynix (both Korean) |
| Initial investment | $100B committed (of $500B total) |
| Compute target | ~10 GW AI datacenter capacity |
| JV members | OpenAI, SoftBank, Oracle (Microsoft as tech partner) |
The commodity memory shock. When 40% of global DRAM capacity gets priority-allocated to a single buyer, other consumers face a supply squeeze. This is not theoretical—it is already happening. TrendForce and IDC project Q1 2026 contract price increases of approximately 100% quarter-over-quarter for PC DRAM, 90% for server DRAM, and 90% for LPDDR mobile memory.[24] Samsung warned investors of "potential supply constraints" and reversed its planned DDR4 phase-out, extending DDR4 production through December 2026 because legacy memory has become more expensive than its successor DDR5.[25]
The downstream impact is severe. IDC projects the global PC market could contract 11.3% and the smartphone market 12.9% in units shipped due to memory cost pass-through.[24] Micron's management disclosed on its earnings call that the company can meet only 55–60% of core customer demand for HBM, with its Indiana HBM packaging facility not operational until the second half of 2028.[26]
Allocation crowding. The Stargate wafer commitment exposes a structural dynamic that concentration metrics alone miss. When a single buyer commands priority allocation on 40% of global output from a duopoly, the remaining 60% must serve every other customer—hyperscalers, OEMs, automotive, industrial, defense. The memory market transitions from a commodity pricing model to an allocation hierarchy, where position in the queue matters more than willingness to pay.
This compounds every layer of the Korea dependency. HBM production already consumes approximately three times the wafer area of DDR5 per gigabyte.[13] As Samsung and SK Hynix shift wafer allocation toward high-margin HBM and Stargate-committed DRAM, conventional memory production gets squeezed from both directions. The result is a single demand commitment from a single project, routed through a single country's semiconductor industry, creating price shocks across the entire global memory market.
The Stargate effect transforms Korea's memory concentration from a risk factor to an active market-moving force. The 79% Korean HBM share and 60%+ Korean DRAM share were previously concentration statistics. With Stargate's priority allocation locked in, they are now the mechanism through which a single AI infrastructure project can reshape global semiconductor pricing.
The Cascade Scenario
Unlike Japan's primary risk vector (the Nankai Trough megathrust earthquake), Korea's disruption scenarios are predominantly geopolitical and economic rather than seismic.
Geopolitical escalation. North Korean provocations—missile tests, border incidents, nuclear threats—can trigger market disruptions, evacuation protocols, and supply chain uncertainty even without direct physical damage. South Korea's semiconductor facilities in Icheon and Pyeongtaek are approximately 70 kilometers from the DMZ.
Trade policy leverage. Korea sits at the intersection of US-China semiconductor tensions. Export control escalation, retaliatory measures, or Korea's own foreign policy decisions can affect HBM supply allocation. In 2019, Japan demonstrated that allied nations use material dependencies instrumentally when it restricted semiconductor material exports to Korea over historical grievances.
Economic fragility. Semiconductors represent approximately 24–30% of Korea's monthly exports.[6] This concentration means Korean economic policy, currency dynamics, and fiscal decisions are structurally coupled to memory market cycles—creating feedback loops between macroeconomic conditions and HBM supply.
Natural disaster. While Korea's seismic risk is lower than Japan's, the 2016 Gyeongju earthquake (M5.8)—the largest in recorded Korean history—demonstrated that the peninsula is not seismically inert.
Cascade Timeline: Korean HBM Disruption
Korea + Japan + Taiwan: The Allied Trifecta
This analysis is the second in ForcedAlpha's allied supply chain dependency series. The first piece mapped Japan's cross-domain criticality: 48 companies, 6 domains, $23.8 trillion in downstream exposure, zero redundancy. Together, the two analyses reveal a structural pattern that no single-country risk assessment captures.
Three allied countries form a single, non-redundant system. US policy treats each as a separate issue.
US policy addresses these dependencies in isolation. The CHIPS Act funds domestic fabrication (addressing Taiwan). CHIPS Act NAPMP awards of $1.4 billion target advanced packaging (partially addressing Taiwan).[20] SK Hynix received $458 million for an Indiana advanced HBM packaging and R&D facility—but mass production is not expected until the second half of 2028.[21] No program addresses the Japanese materials layer at all.
The CHIPS Act funds fabs in Arizona. The HBM inside those fabs comes from Korea. The underfill inside that HBM comes from Japan. The qualification walls between layers mean no amount of money solves this in under three years.
A disruption to any one of these three allied nations cascades through the other two. Japanese materials feed Korean memory production. Korean HBM feeds Taiwanese packaging. Taiwanese packaging produces finished AI GPUs. The system has no bypass. The qualification walls between layers—12 to 36 months for materials, 18+ months for HBM supplier qualification, years for new packaging facilities—mean that financial investment alone cannot create alternatives on relevant timelines.
The Resilience Gap
The most striking finding of this analysis is not that Korea controls AI memory. Korean industrial excellence in memory technology is decades in the making and reflects sustained engineering achievement. The finding is that no institution models the three-layer allied dependency as a single system. The following observations are a framework for analysis, not policy prescriptions.
1. Map the three-layer allied dependency as a single system. Japan risk, Korea risk, and Taiwan risk are not independent variables. They are serially connected. A disruption at any layer propagates through the other two with cascading amplification. Risk models that treat each country separately understate the true exposure.
2. Build strategic HBM reserves. Current datacenter HBM inventories are measured in weeks. Given the 79% geographic concentration in Korea and zero US production, even a three-month strategic reserve could buffer a short-duration disruption.
3. Accelerate US-based HBM production and packaging. SK Hynix's Indiana facility ($458 million CHIPS Act award) and Micron's Virginia HBM assembly are steps in the right direction, but neither will be operational before 2028. The gap between today and 2028 is the exposure window.
4. Address the materials layer. No US program targets sole-source Japanese materials (Namics underfill, Ajinomoto ABF resin). Even if Korean HBM production were replicated domestically, the Japanese materials dependency would persist.
5. Monitor the Namics contract. The expiring exclusive contract between Namics and SK Hynix could reshape HBM supply chain dynamics. Whether SK Hynix diversifies its underfill supply, whether Namics opens to Samsung or Micron, or whether Korean alternatives mature will significantly affect the concentration risk profile.
Korean industrial excellence in memory technology is decades in the making. The question is not whether Korea is excellent—it demonstrably is. The question is whether the rest of the world has a plan for the day something goes wrong.
Methodology
| Nodes | 2453 (985 companies + 342 materials + allied entities, infrastructure, financing) |
| Edges | 8441 supply chain relationships |
| Themes | 22 (AI/Semiconductors, Robotics, Energy, Defense, Quantum, Space, Cyber, Critical Minerals, Reshoring, Crypto) |
| Graph algorithms | BFS cascade exposure, bridge node detection, single point of failure (SPOF) analysis, betweenness centrality |
| ForcedAlpha Severity Index | 1 (commodity, many suppliers) to 5 (irreplaceable, sole source globally). Derived from supplier concentration, qualification timelines, and BFS cascade exposure. |
| HBM-specific data | Market share: Counterpoint Research Q3 2025. Market size: BofA/Micron estimates. CoWoS capacity: Morgan Stanley, DigiTimes. Material dependencies: TrendForce, Nomad Semi. |
| Update frequency | Automated daily pipeline |
Market share figures in this analysis use Q3 2025 data (the most recent quarterly breakdown available from Counterpoint Research at time of publication). HBM market share is volatile: SK Hynix held 62% in Q2 2025 but dropped to 57% in Q3 2025 as Samsung recovered share. Numbers should be interpreted as directional indicators of concentration rather than precise point estimates.
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Sources
- Counterpoint Research, HBM Market Share Q3 2025. SK Hynix ~57%, Samsung ~22%, Micron ~21%. Reported via Semiecosystem (Mark LaPedus) and Astute Group (Q2 data).
- Micron FQ1 2026 earnings call (December 2025): HBM TAM approximately $35B (2025), projected $100B by 2028. Bank of America estimate: $54.6B for 2026, 58% YoY growth. See SK Hynix 2026 Market Outlook.
- KED Global: Samsung/SK Hynix gross margins projected at 63–67% in Q4 2025, surpassing TSMC's 60%. See also TrendForce (Dec 2025).
- Micron Technology investor relations: HBM fabricated at Hiroshima, Japan; packaged at AATT facility, Taichung, Taiwan. See Tom's Hardware, DigiTimes.
- Micron press release (Dec 3, 2025): exit from Crucial consumer brand. See also CNBC.
- BusinessKorea: South Korea's 2025 exports hit record $709.7B; semiconductor exports $173.4B (24.4%). See also InvestKOREA.
- Introl Blog: "approximately 90% of NVIDIA's HBM comes from SK Hynix." See also DigiTimes.
- TrendForce (Sep 2025): Samsung 12-high HBM3E cleared NVIDIA tests after 18-month setback.
- Morgan Stanley research; Astute Group: NVIDIA secures 60% of total CoWoS capacity for 2026. See also DigiTimes.
- FinancialContent: TSMC to quadruple CoWoS capacity to 130,000 wafers/month by late 2026. Current ~75,000–80,000/month. Amkor allocated 180,000–190,000 wafers/year, SPIL 60,000–80,000/year.
- Medium: TSMC Arizona chips flown to Taiwan for packaging. See also Tom's Hardware.
- Amkor IR: $2B Arizona advanced packaging facility, production expected 2028.
- Tom's Hardware: "HBM consumes around three times the wafer capacity of DDR5 per gigabyte."
- Semi Engineering: "HBM4 Sticks With Microbumps, Postponing Hybrid Bonding." JEDEC relaxed height limit from 720um to 775um.
- TrendForce (Sep 2025): Korea's reliance on Japan in HBM supply chain. Namics underfill "supplied almost exclusively." Korean alternatives blocked by "20–30 years of accumulated data." See also Nomad Semi.
- TrendForce (Jan 2026): SK Hynix may stick with MR-MUF for HBM4 16-high; exclusive Namics partnership approaching expiration.
- TrendForce (Oct 2025): hybrid bonder market could reach $2B by 2028. See also Bits&Chips.
- Tom's Hardware (Dec 2025): Kioxia 332-layer BiCS10 production expedited to 2026. TrendForce (Sep 2025): NVIDIA partnership targeting 100M IOPS, commercial launch 2027.
- Blocks & Files (Jan 2026): SK Hynix to restructure Solidigm into AI-focused entity with $10B commitment.
- NIST (Jan 2025): $1.4B NAPMP awards for advanced packaging (Natcast, Applied Materials, ASU, Absolics).
- NIST CHIPS: SK Hynix $458M award for Indiana advanced HBM packaging, mass production expected H2 2028.