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Memory Chipmaker SK Hynix Kicks Off $28 Billion US Listing

(Bloomberg) — SK Hynix Inc. kicked off its formal marketing process for its US listing on Monday, as the South Korean chipmaker looks to capitalize on surging investor demand for the high-flying memory-chip sector.

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The company is seeking to sell American depositary receipts representing about 17.79 million common shares, according to a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, which would be valued at about $28 billion based on Friday’s closing price in Seoul. The offering of American depositary receipts comes after the firm’s Seoul-traded stock rallied about 260% this year, propelling the company’s market capitalization above $1 trillion.

A US listing for SK Hynix opens up a powerful fundraising channel for the world’s top supplier of high-bandwidth memory (HBM), as demand for equipment used in artificial intelligence computing turbocharges companies’ spending plans. The firm and longtime rival Samsung Electronics Co. are poised to ramp up investment in the country as part of a South Korean government-led initiative worth $880 billion.

SK Hynix’s US listing joins a rush of tech giants tapping the market’s deep pools of capital to fund the buildout of AI infrastructure. SpaceX held the largest initial public offering in history earlier in June, while Alphabet Inc. is set to raise $85 billion to fund its AI plans.

The South Korean firm expects the ADRs to begin trading on July 10, according to an earlier regulatory filing. At the proposed size, SK Hynix’s ADR sale would be among the top three first-time share sales ever, depending on the exchange rate. It would rival Saudi Aramco’s $29.4 billion 2019 debut, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Fresh Supply

With an offering that’s expected to be the biggest ever listing by a foreign company on a US exchange, SK Hynix is making an outsize bet on the market’s ability to absorb more fresh supply of AI-related stock, even from a pioneer.

The company’s early shift to embrace HBM — and a relatively sluggish response by Samsung — made it the go-to provider for Nvidia Corp., bringing a huge windfall and vaulting the underdog past its rival by some measures. It controlled 57% of the global HBM market share by revenue in the fourth quarter of 2025, according to data from Counterpoint Research.

SK Hynix’s operating profit for the first quarter jumped to 37.61 trillion won, a record high that compares with the average estimate by analysts for 35.7 trillion won. Sales nearly tripled to 52.58 trillion won.

US investors are betting that robust AI-related demand represents a secular growth story for memory stocks, which have traditionally been viewed as more cyclical in nature, with demand and growth rising and falling alongside PC and smartphone cycles. Memory and storage companies comprise the top four stocks in the S&P 500 Index this year.

Even large companies have scrambled to hike prices for popular consumer products to manage the rising costs of memory chips. Within a span of five hours, Apple Inc. and Microsoft Corp. hiked the prices for such products like Xbox video-game consoles, Macs and iPads. Both companies blamed an unprecedented shortage of memory chips driven by the artificial intelligence boom.

Even if the gains from the chip scramble begin to moderate, a US ADR listing could till help SK Hynix narrow a gap in its valuation versus rivals. Asian issuers that already trade in the US include Taiwanese chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. TSMC’s US listing has enabled it to tap into foreign investor flows.

The offering is being led by Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. The company expects the ADRs to trade on the Nasdaq Global Select Market under the symbol SKHY, according to a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

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