SK Hynix’s $28B US share sale draws 7x oversubscription as AI chip hunger intensifies

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When a company tries to raise $28 billion and investors show up with $196 billion worth of demand, that tells you something about where the smart money thinks the future is heading. SK Hynix, the South Korean memory chip giant that supplies the high-bandwidth memory powering Nvidia’s AI accelerators, just pulled off one of the largest share offerings in history, and the market couldn’t get enough of it.

The company’s American Depositary Receipt listing on Nasdaq, trading under the ticker SKHY, saw demand exceed seven times the available shares.

Inside the deal

SK Hynix is selling 17.79 million new common shares, structured as 177.9 million ADRs at a ratio of 10 ADRs per common share. The pricing is based on the company’s closing share price in Seoul.

The company had initially targeted a raise of up to $29.4 billion before settling on the $28 billion figure.

Cornerstone investors added serious credibility to the deal. Baillie Gifford Overseas and Coatue Management, along with Situational Awareness Partners, collectively signaled interest of up to $7 billion.

The proceeds have a clear destination: capacity expansion. SK Hynix plans to acquire advanced ASML EUV lithography equipment, the kind of machinery required to produce cutting-edge memory chips at scale.

Why AI makes this trade irresistible

SK Hynix isn’t just any chipmaker. It’s the dominant supplier of high-bandwidth memory, the specialized chips that sit alongside GPUs in AI data centers and determine how fast those systems can process information.

Nvidia’s latest generation of AI chips requires increasing amounts of HBM, and SK Hynix has been the primary beneficiary of that demand cycle. The company’s share price has reflected this reality in dramatic fashion, with reports indicating gains as high as 636% over recent periods.

SK Hynix recognized that listing in the US would give it direct access to the deepest capital markets in the world, precisely where most of its largest customers are headquartered. The Nasdaq listing creates a liquid, dollar-denominated instrument that US institutional investors can hold without the friction of accessing Korean equity markets.

What this means for investors

The competitive landscape also matters. Samsung is investing aggressively to close the gap in HBM technology, and Micron has been gaining share in certain product segments. SK Hynix’s current technological lead in HBM3E and next-generation products provides a moat, but semiconductor advantages tend to be temporary without continuous reinvestment.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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