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SK Hynix plans Nasdaq debut after selloff

SK Hynix shares fell sharply this week after reports that Meta Platforms may commercialize part of its AI computing capacity triggered a broad sell-off in semiconductor stocks, casting uncertainty over the chipmaker’s upcoming Nasdaq debut.

The company’s stock in Seoul dropped 14.57% on July 1, erasing tens of billions in market value as traders reacted to fears that demand for artificial intelligence infrastructure could be softening. The decline came just days before SK Hynix is set to list American Depositary Receipts on July 10 under the ticker SKHY.

Massive ADR offering moves forward

Despite the market volatility, SK Hynix is proceeding with one of the largest ADR offerings on record. The company aims to raise about 45.45 trillion won, or $29.4 billion, through the issuance of 17.79 million new shares, representing 2.5% of its equity.

The proceeds will be directed toward expanding domestic manufacturing in South Korea, including wafer facilities in Yongin and Cheongju, as well as investments in advanced packaging and EUV equipment. The underwriting group includes Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan.

AI demand narrative faces first major test

The sell-off was driven by initial reports suggesting Meta could sell “excess” AI capacity, a framing that sparked concern over weakening demand. Although the wording was later clarified to refer more broadly to AI computing power, the damage to market sentiment had already taken hold.

The reaction was swift across the sector. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index dropped 6.27%, while major chipmakers such as Micron Technology and KLA saw declines exceeding 10%. In contrast, Meta’s shares gained nearly 9%, as traders viewed the move as a potential new revenue stream.

Liquidity-driven decline, not a fundamental shift

Market participants say the scale of the drop was amplified by positioning rather than fundamentals. Semiconductor stocks had been trading near multi-year highs, with leveraged funds and thematic ETFs heavily concentrated in the sector. As sentiment turned, forced unwinding accelerated losses.

Industry analysts noted that reallocating computing resources is often part of efficiency strategies and does not necessarily indicate falling demand. Similar moves have been observed across other technology firms in recent months.

Strong fundamentals still intact

SK Hynix remains a dominant player in high-bandwidth memory, holding more than 50% market share in a segment critical to AI servers. The global HBM market is projected to grow 58% in 2026 to reach $54.6 billion, providing a strong demand backdrop.

The company’s profitability in DRAM and HBM has positioned it to raise capital at a cyclical high, aligning its Nasdaq listing with peak industry momentum.

Strategic push to close valuation gap

The U.S. listing is part of a broader strategy to access deeper capital markets and higher AI-driven valuations while addressing the so-called Korea discount that has historically weighed on domestic semiconductor stocks.

With trading set to begin next week, the debut will serve as a key test of whether global demand for AI-linked assets can overcome the recent bout of volatility and restore confidence in the sector’s growth trajectory.


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