The AI supercycle needs hardware, and the world’s top supplier of High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM) is heading to Wall Street to fund it. South Korea’s SK Hynix is reportedly considering a massive U.S. listing to raise up to $10 billion (10-15 trillion won).
💰 THE DEAL METRICS:
- The Raise: Exploring a U.S. American Depositary Receipt (ADR) listing by issuing new shares to raise ~$10.03 billion.
- The Strategic Goal: The Nvidia supplier wants to access a deeper, wider pool of global capital and narrow the significant valuation gap it currently suffers compared to U.S.-listed peers like Micron.
- Shareholder Moves: Just to prove they are serious about creating value, SK Hynix recently canceled about 12.2 trillion won worth of treasury shares (2.1% of total outstanding). The market loved the listing news, sending shares up 5.7% in Seoul.
🧠 THE MARKET DOMINANCE:
- #1 in HBM: SK Hynix is the undisputed king of the High-Bandwidth Memory market (the critical bottleneck for AI chips) with a dominant 57% global market share.
- #2 in DRAM: They also command a massive 32% share of the global DRAM market, second only to cross-town rival Samsung Electronics.
💡 THE BOTTOM LINE: This isn’t just about raising capital; it’s a strategic repositioning. By tapping directly into the U.S. equity markets, SK Hynix aims to fund its massive AI infrastructure and capacity expansion while demanding the premium “AI valuation” that Western markets are happily handing out to semiconductor companies.
👇 Semiconductor & Tech Investors: Will a U.S. ADR listing successfully close SK Hynix’s valuation gap with Micron, or will the massive issuance of new shares dilute the upside for current investors?
