Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix are finalizing a coordinated investment of ₩400 trillion to ₩500 trillion (roughly $280 billion to $350 billion) in semiconductor manufacturing facilities across South Korea's Honam and Chungcheong regions. The plan, disclosed during President Lee Jae-myung's announcement of three national mega-projects, centers on front-end process fabs and supporting infrastructure. The Honam region—Gwangju and Jeollanam-do provinces—has never hosted fabrication at this scale.
The commitment follows two years of quiet site surveys and grid-capacity studies. Samsung's existing Pyeongtaek campus houses Line 18, the world's highest-volume EUV facility for 3nm and future 2nm processes. Extending that architecture westward into Honam allows dual-sourcing without carrier-route dependencies on the Yellow Sea industrial corridor. SK Hynix, already expanding HBM3E capacity in Icheon, gains access to cheaper industrial land and a regional labor pool that has historically supplied automotive and petrochemical sectors. The Lee administration has offered tax deferrals and accelerated permitting in exchange for commitments on local hiring and supply-chain anchoring.
This matters because it reframes South Korea's chipmaking geography around resilience, not just density. Pyeongtaek and Icheon are 40 kilometers apart; a single seismic event or grid failure affects both. Honam sits 200 kilometers southwest, on separate transmission infrastructure and water tables. The geopolitical read is equally clear: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company has begun high-volume production in Arizona; Intel is expanding in Ohio and Germany. South Korea's response is to double the domestic footprint before 2030, ensuring that 70% of global HBM and 40% of logic at 3nm or below remain on the peninsula even as friendshoring accelerates. The Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy has indicated that permitting for the first Honam cleanrooms could begin in Q2 2025, with shell construction starting in 2026.
Allocators and operators should track three follow-on events. First, Samsung's April earnings call will clarify whether the Honam investment includes a dedicated 2nm GAA line or merely replicates existing 3nm FinFET architecture. Second, SK Hynix's HBM roadmap update in mid-2025 will reveal whether Honam capacity targets HBM4 or remains focused on scaling HBM3E yield. Third, the Korean Semiconductor Industry Association is expected to publish a joint talent pipeline report in Q3 2025, detailing how the two companies plan to staff 15,000 to 20,000 cleanroom positions in a region with minimal fab experience. Equipment orders from ASML, Tokyo Electron, and Applied Materials—likely totaling $40 billion to $50 billion over five years—will begin appearing in supplier disclosures by late 2025.
The Lee administration is treating this as industrial policy with a regional-development mandate. The announced investment is 60% larger than Samsung's entire Pyeongtaek outlay from 2015 to 2023, compressed into a narrower timeframe and split across two historically separate corporate strategies. The execution risk is the story.