Qualcomm (QCOM) surged in two double-digit moves within days. First +11.12% on April 24 riding Intel's earnings tailwind, then another +9% in premarket on April 28 after analyst Ming-Chi Kuo (TF International Securities) reported that OpenAI is exploring a partnership with Qualcomm and MediaTek to build a dedicated AI smartphone chip. The goal: an "app-free" AI agent phone where AI handles all tasks, targeting 2028 mass production.
What the Partnership Actually Means
OpenAI aims to control OS and hardware to enable comprehensive AI agents. The smartphone is its most critical user data input device. Key variables: Qualcomm brings NPU leadership (80 TOPS on Snapdragon X2 Elite, 45 TOPS on mobile), MediaTek brings volume (39% global SoC share per Digitimes Q1 2026), Luxshare handles manufacturing. No official confirmation from any party yet.
The Korean Semiconductor Angle
An AI agent phone needs 16-32GB LPDDR6 vs today's 8-12GB LPDDR5X. SK Hynix completed LPDDR6 development (33% faster, 20% lower power vs LPDDR5X) and is in Qualcomm supply negotiations. Qualcomm CEO visited Korea to meet SK Hynix executives. Samsung delivered LPDDR6X samples to Qualcomm, targeting commercialization by H2 2027. Both Korean memory makers are already embedded in Qualcomm's supply chain regardless of the outcome.
Three Scenarios
- Bullish 25%: Partnership officially confirmed H2 2026, AI phone ships 2028. Korean LPDDR6 suppliers benefit directly.
- Base case 55%: Exploratory phase drags on, specs not finalized until 2027-2028, production slides to 2029-2030.
- Bearish 20%: OpenAI pivots to custom silicon like Apple, restructures or abandons partnership.
Bottom Line
Rather than chasing QCOM after two back-to-back double-digit rallies (YTD still -13%), Korean investors may find better risk/reward in SK Hynix and Samsung. Both are positioned in the Qualcomm memory supply chain regardless of whether this specific OpenAI phone project succeeds.
For the full analysis in Korean, visit Snakestock
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