South Korea’s SK Hynix priced its American Depositary Receipts at $149 yesterday, raising about $26.5 billion, a US regulatory filing showed, highlighting strong investor appetite for a pivotal chipmaker in the AI supply chain.
The share sale comes as the company leverages its position as the leading supplier of high-bandwidth memory chips, a critical component for the advanced processors powering global artificial intelligence systems.
SK Hynix priced the listing at a 2.7% premium over its average share price in the last three trading days, the company said in a filing today to the Korea stock exchange.
Chip stocks have lost some momentum in recent weeks after a stellar run, partly due to investor concerns about slower AI spending.
Demand for SK Hynix’s US share sale was more than seven times available shares, a person familiar with the matter said.
SK Hynix declined to comment on the pricing and the demand for shares. The person declined to be identified as details of the share sale were confidential.
The US shares will start trading today under the ticker symbol “SKHY” on Nasdaq.
The offering from the South Korean chipmaker will finance new factories and equipment to meet surging AI chip demand.
In addition to bringing in funds, SK Hynix’s US listing is expected to help narrow its valuation gap with US rival Micron, which despite having less market share in key memory products, has benefited from direct access to the world’s largest pool of investors.

Micron trades at a 12-month forward price-to-earnings ratio of 6.66 times versus SK Hynix’s 5.5 times.
“SK Hynix leads on share and Nvidia proximity, Micron competes on power efficiency, US positioning, and momentum from third place,” said Daniel Newman, CEO of tech research firm Futurum Group.
Meanwhile, SK Hynix continues to battle its domestic rival, Samsung, for chip supremacy. Samsung Electronics remains the world’s largest memory chipmaker by volume.
SK Hynix has made its fortune by becoming the most sought-after supplier of high-bandwidth memory chips, a culmination of 14 years of bets that brought it skepticism and scorn but ultimately put it at the centre of the global AI gold rush.
We need your consent to load this rte-player contentWe use rte-player to manage extra content that can set cookies on your device and collect data about your activity. Please review their details and accept them to load the content.Manage Preferences
“As long as there is demand for graphic processors and AI data centers, SK Hynix is indispensable,” said Yoo Hoi-jun, an electrical engineering professor at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said last month SK Hynix would continue to be the US AI chipmaker’s largest partner, adding that the current memory chip shortage would persist for a few years due to strong demand.
Though shares in semiconductor companies globally have lost momentum in recent weeks, companies like SK Hynix and rival Samsung Electronics are sitting on historic gains as insatiable demand for computer chips to power AI data centres has sent profits soaring.
“AI demand keeps inflecting, currently driven mostly by strong datacenter CPU demand. HBM demand also remains strong: we expect the market to grow from about $65 billion this year to $120 billion next year and about $290 billion by 2030,” said Rolf Bulk, Head of Semiconductors and Infrastructure, Futurum Equities.
SK Hynix shares closed up 5% yesterday but have dropped by a quarter in the last two weeks. Even so, the stock is up 680% for the past 12 months.
As dizzying as that long-term share jump has been, the shares have not outpaced massive gains in profits – earnings so huge that each employee is expected to get an annual bonus of about $574,500, making them highly sought-after marriage partners.
Tellingly, the firm’s 12-month forward price-to-earnings ratio has dropped, with its current level of 5.5 times down from 7.9 times at end-October.
“SK Hynix holds the edge in production scale and maturity. Across the board, since demand is far outweighing supply, they have had tremendous pricing power,” said Ken Mahoney, CEO of Mahoney Asset Management.
“So, generally speaking, their first mover advantage is and was their strength,” he added.

