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Qualcomm’s 2-nm Gamble: Is Samsung Ready for a Comeback?

Anderson Liam
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Qualcomm’s reported discussions with Samsung Electronics over contract manufacturing of two-nanometer chips point to a potentially meaningful shift in the competitive dynamics of advanced semiconductor production. From the perspective of NewsTrackerToday, this is less about a single supplier negotiation and more about how chip designers are repositioning themselves ahead of the next process-node transition.

According to comments attributed to Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon, the company is in talks primarily with Samsung and several other foundries regarding 2-nanometer manufacturing, with design work already completed and commercialization targeted in the near term. If accurate, this suggests Qualcomm is moving beyond exploratory discussions and into execution planning – a notable step given the technical and financial risks associated with leading-edge nodes.

Samsung, for its part, has declined to comment on individual customers. However, senior leadership at Samsung Electronics has recently emphasized that new large-scale supply agreements are setting the stage for a turnaround in its loss-making foundry business. The timing matters. As NewsTrackerToday has noted in prior coverage, Samsung Foundry has struggled in recent years with yield consistency and client confidence, particularly at advanced nodes. A potential Qualcomm engagement would represent a reputational inflection point.

From a strategic standpoint, Qualcomm’s interest in Samsung aligns with a broader industry trend toward supplier diversification. Relying on a single leading foundry at advanced nodes concentrates operational and geopolitical risk. Even partial allocation of 2-nanometer production to Samsung would give Qualcomm leverage – not only in pricing negotiations but also in capacity prioritization as demand for AI-enabled and high-performance chips accelerates. Sophie Leclerc, NewsTrackerToday’s technology sector analyst, views the move as a calculated hedge rather than a wholesale pivot. “This looks like Qualcomm securing an option on future capacity,” she notes. “At two nanometers, optionality itself has value. The real test will be whether Samsung can demonstrate stable yields at scale, not just technical readiness.”

Recent developments strengthen Samsung’s narrative. The company’s high-profile multi-year supply agreement with Tesla has already signaled renewed momentum in its contract manufacturing business. While a single customer does not resolve structural challenges, it changes market psychology. For prospective clients, demonstrated execution matters as much as process claims. At the same time, the 2-nanometer transition raises the bar for everyone involved. Gate-all-around architectures, power efficiency targets and defect tolerance leave little margin for error. For chip designers like Qualcomm, delays or performance variance can ripple across entire product roadmaps. That reality explains why discussions are happening now, well ahead of volume production.

Isabella Moretti, NewsTrackerToday’s corporate strategy analyst, emphasizes the reputational dimension. “If Samsung successfully delivers even limited 2-nanometer volumes to a top-tier designer, it lowers the perceived risk for the next customer,” she says. “Foundry competition is as much about trust as it is about transistor density.”

Looking ahead, the most likely outcome is a phased engagement: initial pilot runs followed by incremental scaling if performance metrics hold. A full production shift would require sustained proof of yield stability and cost competitiveness. Failure to meet those benchmarks, however, would reinforce existing market skepticism.

The broader implication is clear. Advanced-node manufacturing is entering a phase where execution credibility outweighs ambition. For Qualcomm, supplier diversification is a strategic necessity. For Samsung, this moment represents an opportunity to convert long-term investment into regained relevance. From the standpoint of News Tracker Today, the significance of these talks lies not in whether a contract is signed, but in what happens next. The semiconductor race at two nanometers will be decided less by announcements and more by who can deliver predictable, commercial-grade output under real-world conditions.

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