Qualcomm shares surge 7% on reports of OpenAI smartphone chip partnership
Chipmaker working with MediaTek and Luxshare to develop AI device expected in mass production by 2028
L'essentiel
- Qualcomm shares rose 7% on Monday after analyst Ming-Chi Kuo reported the company is partnering with OpenAI to develop smartphone processing chips, working alongside Taiwanese semiconductor firm MediaTek and Chinese manufacturer Luxshare.
- Mass production is expected in 2028.
- The partnership supports OpenAI's hardware ambitions following its $6.4 billion acquisition of Jony Ive's startup io last year.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
OpenAI has been expanding beyond software into hardware following its $6.4 billion acquisition of Jony Ive's io startup. The company aims to create AI devices that differ from traditional smartphones, with CEO Sam Altman describing them as providing a more focused experience compared to the sensory overload of modern devices.
Qualcomm shares rose on Monday following reports that it's partnering with OpenAI to create smartphone processing chips to advance the AI firm's hardware ambitions. The U.S. smartphone chipmaker is set to work alongside Taiwanese semiconductor firm MediaTek to develop the chip for OpenAI, with Chinese manufacturer Luxshare co-designing and building the device, Ming-Chi Kuo, an analyst at TF International Securities, said on X on Monday. Mass production of the device is expected in 2028, according to Kuo. Qualcomm was up 7% just after the opening bell. The stock is down 13% so far this year. Qualcomm, OpenAI, and MediaTek did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment confirming the partnership. "Only by fully controlling both the operating system and hardware can OpenAI deliver a comprehensive AI agent service," Kuo said in the post. "The smartphone is the only device that captures the user's full real-time state, which is the most important input for real-time AI agent inference." He explained that smartphones will remain the "largest-scale device category" in the immediate future, and it makes sense for OpenAI to develop a device that is entirely run by AI as the firm has accumulated user data over the years. "Smartphone hardware is already highly mature, so OpenAI can work with the supply chain to develop the device," Kuo said. "On the business model side, OpenAI may bundle subscriptions with hardware and build a new AI agent ecosystem with developers." Qualcomm designs chips and wireless technology for smartphones and other devices, and is best known for its Snapdragon processors, which power many Android phones, and its modem technology that enables mobile connectivity like 4G and 5G. It likely comes as no surprise that OpenAI would partner with the firm to help realize its smartphone plans, after it acquired Apple 's design chief Jony Ive's startup io for $6.4 billion in equity last year to design new AI devices expected to be revealed in two years. Altman said last year that the devices OpenAI is designing with io will be different from smartphones. It will be able to "know everything you've ever thought about, read, said," he said, comparing it to walking through Times Square. "You can then go for a vibe that is not like walking through Times Square and getting bumped into and having all this stuff compete for your attention," Altman said. "But, like, sitting in the most beautiful cabin by a lake and in the mountains and sort of just enjoying the peace and calm." Additionally, it was reported in September that Luxshare signed a deal with OpenAI to produce consumer devices.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
OpenAI will likely announce more details about its device strategy within the next 12 months
Probable · En quelques mois
More smartphone chip partnerships will be announced for AI devices
Possible · En quelques mois
Questions ouvertes
- What are the specific technical specifications of the chip?
- How will OpenAI's device differ from traditional smartphones?
- What will be the pricing model for the device?
- Will the device run a custom operating system?






