SK Hynix eyes US listing as soon as August, could raise up to $14 billion
The world's second-largest memory chipmaker is betting that American investors are hungry for AI hardware exposure.
SK Hynix, the South Korean semiconductor giant that makes the memory chips powering the AI revolution, is pushing to list on a US stock exchange as early as August 2026. The company filed confidentially with the US Securities and Exchange Commission back in March, and early investor feedback has reportedly been, in the words of those close to the process, “tremendously positive.”
The listing, structured as American Depositary Receipts (ADRs), could raise as much as $14 billion. Earlier estimates had pegged the raise somewhere between $6.7 billion and $10 billion, meaning the target has ballooned as AI demand continues to accelerate.
Why the US, and why now
SK Hynix is the world’s second-largest memory chipmaker. It’s also the dominant supplier of high-bandwidth memory (HBM), the specialized chips that serve as the nervous system of AI data centers.
The company already trades on the Korea Exchange. But a US listing opens the door to a dramatically larger pool of capital, particularly from institutional investors who are pouring money into anything adjacent to the AI supply chain.
South Korean stocks have long traded at a discount compared to their global peers, a phenomenon so well-documented it has its own name, the “Korea discount.” A US listing lets SK Hynix tap into the premium valuations that American markets tend to award to companies with strong AI narratives.
Where the money goes
The proceeds from the listing aren’t just going to sit in a treasury account. SK Hynix plans to funnel the capital into new chip manufacturing facilities, specifically in Yongin, South Korea, and Indiana in the US.
The AI memory bottleneck
HBM chips are stacked vertically, a design that allows for much higher bandwidth and lower power consumption than traditional memory. They’re essential for training and running AI models at scale.
SK Hynix has been the leading supplier of HBM to Nvidia, which gives it an almost privileged position in the AI hardware ecosystem. When Nvidia sells more AI accelerators, SK Hynix sells more memory.
What this means for investors
For investors focused on AI and semiconductors, SK Hynix’s US listing creates a direct, liquid way to get exposure to the memory side of the AI trade without navigating foreign exchanges or dealing with the complexities of Korean market access.
Samsung, SK Hynix’s primary rival in the memory space, has been playing catch-up on HBM technology. Micron, the US-based competitor, is the third major player. A US-listed SK Hynix would invite constant, direct comparison to Micron in particular.
The “tremendously positive” early feedback suggests that, for now, the market is willing to pay up for what SK Hynix represents: a picks-and-shovels play on the AI gold rush, with a product that every major AI company needs and very few companies in the world can make.
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