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AI in Asia
3 Before 9: April 28, 2026
3 Before 9

Monday, 27 April 2026

3 Before 9: April 28, 2026

3 daily AI stories and 1 bold opinion before your 9am kopi

Listen to today's 3 Before 9

Who should pay attention

Enterprise leaders | Developers | Founders | Policymakers

What changes next

Asia is no longer just the factory floor for AI. Korea, Taiwan and Greater China are now the research, silicon and assembly anchors, which means labour disputes, talent flows and bilateral diplomacy will move chip prices and product roadmaps as much as capex announcements do.

1

Google Picks Seoul For Its First Global AI Campus

On Monday, South Korean President Lee Jae-myung and Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis announced the launch of a Google AI Campus in Seoul, the first of its kind anywhere in the world for the US firm. The facility, set to open inside Google's Seoul offices by the end of 2026, will give Korean academics, researchers and startups direct access to DeepMind's AI for Science models, training programmes and events. Seoul National University, KAIST and three government-backed AI Bio Innovation Hubs are confirmed early partners. At the Korean government's request, Google has committed to dispatching at least 10 of its top US-based researchers to work alongside local talent, with Hassabis indicating more could follow. The signing took place at the Four Seasons in Seoul, the same venue where AlphaGo defeated Lee Se-dol in 2016.

Why it matters for Asia

Korea has spent the last decade trying to convert its semiconductor leadership into AI relevance, and a flagship physical hub from DeepMind is a meaningful coup over Tokyo and Singapore. For enterprise buyers across the region, it signals that frontier-lab capability is now landing in Asia in person, not just via API, and that Korean universities and startups will gain a structural research advantage in AI for life sciences and materials. Expect spin-out activity, joint-IP deals and stronger pull on Korean engineering talent who might otherwise migrate to US labs.

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2

OpenAI Builds AI Phone Chip With MediaTek And Qualcomm

OpenAI is co-developing a custom smartphone processor with Qualcomm and Taiwan's MediaTek, with Chinese contract manufacturer Luxshare lined up as exclusive system designer and assembler, supply-chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo reported on Sunday. The device is intended as an agent-first phone that swaps the traditional app grid for a task-oriented interface, where users ask the assistant to execute jobs across cloud and on-device models. Mass production is targeted for 2028, with OpenAI internally aiming for 300 to 400 million annual units, the same volume band as Apple's iPhone. Qualcomm shares jumped roughly 13% in pre-market trading on the news. Neither Qualcomm, OpenAI nor MediaTek has confirmed the partnership.

Why it matters for Asia

Asia's hardware supply chain is set to do the heavy lifting on whatever post-iPhone form factor emerges from this AI cycle, with MediaTek for silicon, Luxshare for assembly and Korean and Japanese suppliers in line for memory and displays. For component makers, system integrators and policy planners across the region, this is the first concrete signal that the next consumer device platform could be built end-to-end in Asia rather than designed in Cupertino. It also locks Qualcomm and MediaTek into a deeper handset partnership at exactly the moment Beijing is pressing them to localise more design.

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3

Samsung Strike Threat Risks Four Per Cent Of Global DRAM

Samsung's largest union has voted to launch an 18-day general strike from 21 May to 7 June, a stoppage that TrendForce now estimates could remove up to 4% of global DRAM output and 3% of NAND output for several weeks. Pyeongtaek and Hwaseong, the two fabs at the heart of Samsung's HBM4 ramp for Nvidia's Vera Rubin platform, sit directly in the firing line. The union is demanding the company scrap its performance bonus cap and route 15% of operating profit to staff, after more than 200 engineers defected to rival SK Hynix in the past four months. Samsung's own losses could reach 30 trillion won, around 22 billion US dollars, if the strike runs its full course.

Why it matters for Asia

HBM is the single most supply-constrained input in the global AI build-out, and Korea makes around 80% of it. A multi-week disruption at Samsung lands in the middle of Nvidia's Vera Rubin transition and would push more pricing power and customer share to SK Hynix, which is already widening its HBM4 lead. For data-centre operators, hyperscalers and chip buyers from Tokyo to Mumbai, the message is that 2026 AI memory pricing is now hostage to a Korean labour dispute as much as to fab capacity.

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Bonus Signal

cap and route 15% of operating profit to staff, after more than 200 engineers defected to rival SK Hynix in the past four months. Samsung's own losses could reach 30 trillion won, around 22 billion US dollars, if the strike runs its full course.

Why it matters: HBM is the single most supply-constrained input in the global AI build-out, and Korea makes around 80% of it. A multi-week disruption at Samsung lands in the middle of Nvidia's Vera Rubin transition and would push more pricing power and customer share to SK Hynix, which is already widening its HBM4 lead. For data-centre operators, hyperscalers and chip buyers from Tokyo to Mumbai, the message is that 2026 AI memory pricing is now hostage to a Korean labour dispute as much as to fab capacity.

THE AI IN ASIA VIEW

Three stories, one direction of travel. Google plants its first global AI campus in Seoul, OpenAI hands the silicon and assembly of its iPhone-rival smartphone to MediaTek and Luxshare, and a Samsung labour dispute now sits between Nvidia and the world's HBM supply. Each one tightens the same knot, the next chapter of AI is being built, fabricated and increasingly governed in Asia, even when the brand on the box says Mountain View, San Francisco or Santa Clara.

For regional leaders the implication is sharper than another year of capex headlines. Korea is being cast as a research and memory hub it cannot afford to destabilise, Taiwan and Greater China are being asked to anchor the next consumer hardware platform, and Tokyo, Singapore and New Delhi will need to think harder about where they fit in this division of labour. The buyers, founders and policymakers who treat 2026 as a pure infrastructure cycle will miss the bigger move, AI sovereignty in Asia is now as much a labour, talent and supply-chain question as a chip one.

That's today's 3 Before 9.

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Friday

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Thursday

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Wednesday

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Tuesday

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