Nvidia's Nation-by-Nation Lock-In Machine Reaches South Korea
Jensen Huang's Seoul visit produced a template now familiar from the Gulf and Japan: co-development agreements at the component level, gigawatt-scale infrastructure commitments from dominant local platforms, and high-visibility alignment with national leadership. The SK Hynix memory pact goes further than prior sovereign deals — by embedding SK Hynix in the Vera CPU architecture at the design stage, Nvidia has created switching costs measured in qualification cycles and years, not quarters. The Naver data centre commitment layers a software ecosystem dependency on top of the hardware lock-in, ensuring that Korea's dominant domestic AI platform deepens its reliance on Nvidia's stack as it competes against global hyperscalers.
The strategic consequence is structural rather than transactional. South Korea now sits simultaneously as Nvidia's most important memory supplier, a significant GPU customer, and a government actively redirecting semiconductor tax revenues into AI investment. That convergence of roles — supplier, customer, and sovereign co-investor — gives Seoul unusual leverage in any future negotiation, but also means that any disruption to Korean semiconductor operations carries direct, near-term consequences for Nvidia's GPU availability and Vera CPU ramp. The pattern, replicated across the UAE, Japan, and now Korea, suggests that jurisdictions without a comparable Nvidia partnership are increasingly at a structural disadvantage as national AI infrastructure becomes a geopolitical asset class.