Samsung's 7.5% Surge: Flow Metrics Behind the Tesla and AMD Deals

Generado por agente de IACarina RivasRevisado porAInvest News Editorial Team
miércoles, 18 de marzo de 2026, 5:11 pm ET2 min de lectura
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The market's immediate reaction to the new deal news was a decisive flow event. Samsung's stock surged 7.53% to close at 208,500 KRW on March 18, 2026. This move was accompanied by a notable spike in trading activity, with volume reaching 41.16 million shares-well above its three-month average of 24.58 million.

The price pop directly boosted the company's valuation. The intraday market capitalization climbed to 1.394 trillion KRW. This places the stock's total value at a significant premium to its recent levels, reflecting the market's fresh optimism on the deal's potential.

This surge must be viewed against a powerful year-long trend and looming near-term pressure. The stock has already gained 220% over the past year, trading near its 52-week high. Yet the rally faces a headwind from the expected earnings report, where net income is forecast to halve in the second quarter. The flow now shows a battle between deal-driven momentum and fundamental profit pressure.

The Deal Flow: Tesla's $16.5B and AMD's HBM4/DDR5 MOU

The confirmed value of the TeslaTSLA-- deal is substantial. Samsung and Tesla have a $16.5 billion contract with an effective start date of July 26, 2025, and an end date of December 31, 2033. This locks in capacity for volume production of Tesla's next-generation AI chips, likely on Samsung's 2nm process, beginning in Texas in the second half of 2027. The financial impact is de-risking for Samsung's foundry business, providing a multi-year revenue anchor.

The AMDAMD-- collaboration is a strategic MOU, not a priced contract. The agreement, signed on March 18, covers HBM4 supply for AMD Instinct™ MI455X GPUs and next-generation DDR5 solutions. While it signals deep integration for AI memory and computing, the MOU does not specify a $2 billion value. It aligns on primary supply but lacks the binding financial terms of the Tesla deal.

Both agreements extend through 2033, a critical de-risking period. The Tesla contract provides a guaranteed, multi-billion dollar flow over eight years. The AMD MOU secures Samsung's position in the next-gen memory stack, potentially unlocking future revenue streams. Together, they lock in foundry capacity and reduce the vulnerability of Samsung's high-cost expansion to near-term demand swings.

Valuation and Forward Flow: P/E vs. Contract Value

The market is clearly pricing in future execution. Samsung's trailing P/E ratio stands at 19.52. This multiple implies investors are valuing the stock based on earnings expected from the new long-term contracts, not just current profit. The recent 7.5% surge and the stock's 220% gain over the past year show the market is focused on the flow of future revenue, not the present quarter.

This forward-looking bet creates a tension with near-term fundamentals. The stock's massive run-up contrasts sharply with the company's own forecast for second-quarter profit to more than halve. The valuation is being supported by multi-year deal flow, but the upcoming earnings report on April 28th will test whether the market's optimism is justified by the company's ability to deliver in the short term.

The primary risk is execution delay. The Tesla contract is a multi-year anchor, but its value is realized over eight years. If production timelines slip or the $16.5 billion flow does not materialize as planned, the current premium valuation could face pressure. For now, the flow metrics support the price, but the setup is one of high expectations riding on a long-term bet.

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