The
South Korean group's investment comes as the memory market is
expected to rebound next year because of limited supplies and
rising demand for fifth-generation devices and networks.
Samsung is the world's largest maker of NAND flash memory chips,
which can hold data permanently and are found in mobile devices,
memory cards, USB flash drives and solid-state drives.
In 2017, Samsung announced that it would invest $7 billion over
three years in its Xi'an plant that produces NAND flash memory
chips.
Those investment phases follow an earlier $10.8 billion
investment into a testing and packaging plant in Xi'an.
Samsung declined to comment.
Samsung's rivals in NAND flash memory include Korea's SK Hynix
<000660.KS>, U.S.-based Micron Technology Inc <MU.O>, and
Toshiba Corp <6502.T>
Several Chinese companies have attempted to enter the memory
sector, though none has been successful enough to compete with
overseas rivals.
This past autumn, Yangtze Memory Technologies Company (YMTC)
announced it would begin mass producing 64-layer 3D NAND chips,
the benchmark for most leading industry players.
(Editing by Nick Macfie)
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