SK Hynix’s American depositary shares are set to make their Nasdaq debut after the South Korean memory-chip giant priced 177.9 million ADSs at $149 each, raising about $26.5 billion.
Each ADS represents one-tenth of a Seoul-listed common share, giving US investors direct access to one of the biggest beneficiaries of the AI infrastructure boom.
The shares begin when-issued trading under SKHYV on Friday, before switching to SKHY for regular trading on Monday.
Yet the debut comes after an extraordinary rally and during exceptionally favourable memory-market conditions, making the opening valuation as important as the company’s growth prospects.
5 things investors must know
1. The opening premium could quickly erase the valuation upside
Investors should compare SKHYV’s market price with the currency-adjusted value of SK Hynix’s Seoul shares rather than treating the $149 offer price as automatic fair value.
The offering was already priced at a premium of nearly 3% to the Korean shares, and strong first-day demand could widen that gap further.
Morningstar equity analyst Jing Jie Yu raised his fair-value estimate for each Korean common share to 2.4 million won on July 2, reflecting stronger DRAM and NAND pricing and better near-term earnings visibility.
However, Yu wrote in Morningstar’s analysis that the memory cycle would eventually normalise, “limiting upside at current levels”.
Because 10 US shares represent one Korean share, investors must divide that valuation by 10 and then account for movements in the won-dollar exchange rate.
2. HBM leadership is the biggest catalyst, but the lead is narrowing
SK Hynix’s central attraction is its position in high-bandwidth memory, which rapidly supplies data to Nvidia GPUs and other AI accelerators.
The company reinforced that relationship in June by announcing a multi-year technology partnership with Nvidia and shipping samples of its 12-layer HBM4E product to major customers.
Counterpoint Research estimated that SK Hynix generated 58% of global HBM revenue during the first quarter, comfortably ahead of Samsung and Micron.
But that share had fallen from 69% a year earlier as rivals gained ground.
SK Hynix remains the clear market leader, although investors should not assume that its current dominance is permanent.
3. Tight memory supply is producing extraordinary earnings
The current shortage stretches beyond HBM.
SK Hynix reported record first-quarter revenue of 52.58 trillion won and operating profit of 37.61 trillion won as prices rose across conventional DRAM and NAND products.
J.P. Morgan Asset Management strategists Meera Pandit and Katie Korngiebel described memory as a “strategic bottleneck” in a May analysis.
They estimated that DRAM and NAND prices had risen about 300% and 200% year on year, as capacity struggled to match demand.
Longer-term customer agreements may reduce some volatility through 2028.
However, the strategists cautioned that semiconductor growth ultimately depends on hyperscalers generating adequate returns from their enormous AI investments.
If those returns disappoint, infrastructure spending and memory demand could weaken.
4. Samsung, Micron and new factories could restart the cycle
Today’s shortage is encouraging every major supplier to invest.
TrendForce expects SK Hynix to retain its HBM leadership in 2026, but projects its share of global HBM bit output will fall as Samsung expands HBM4 production and Micron increases advanced capacity.
Morningstar expects Korean memory-wafer capacity to more than triple when existing plans and government-backed investment are included.
Yu forecasts that the supply response could drive another downturn in 2029 and 2030.
The long-term danger is familiar: factories being built to solve today’s shortage may eventually create tomorrow’s oversupply.
5. The listing offers re-rating potential, alongside dilution
This is a primary capital raise, not simply a US-traded wrapper around existing shares.
SK Hynix is issuing 17.79 million new common shares through the ADS offering, equal to about 2.5% of its issued stock.
The proceeds will support factories and manufacturing equipment, but existing investors will own a slightly smaller proportion of the company.
Yu told Morningstar that the capital raise was mainly intended to bridge the valuation gap between Korean and US memory companies.
Easier access, dollar trading and US market hours could support a re-rating.
Still, some professional investors have already reduced exposure.
In an April fund update, Schroders managers Dorian Carrell and Dominique Braeuninger said they trimmed their SK Hynix position after “exceptional performance”, citing the speed of the rally and increasingly extended positioning.
For first-day buyers, the debate is therefore not whether SK Hynix is a leading AI supplier, but how much of that leadership is already reflected in the price.
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