Samsung Electronics unveiled plans Friday to buy back 10 trillion won ($7.2 billion) of its shares over the next year, sending its stock soaring in South Korean trading.
Shares of Samsung, South Korea's largest company by market value, closed up 7.2% Friday on the stock buyback plan. Its shares are down more than 30% this year, however, as the memory chip maker and producer of Android phones rivaling Apple's ( AAPL ) iPhone struggles to catch up during the artificial intelligence (AI) boom.
Samsung said it would buy stock worth 3 trillion won over the next three months starting Monday. The buyback will comprise of 50.14 million common shares and 6.91 million preferred shares.
SK Hynix, whose stock is up 22% this year, is now the main supplier of high-bandwidth chips to AI darling Nvidia ( NVDA ), according to Bloomberg , which called the buyback plan a "surprise."
Samsung has also been losing ground to
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.
(
TSM
) in manufacturing custom chips for outside customers.