Key Highlights The South Korean semiconductor manufacturer is pursuing approximately $28 billion in capital through a Nasdaq American Depositary Receipt offering, marking one of 2025’s larges
Key Highlights
- The South Korean semiconductor manufacturer is pursuing approximately $28 billion in capital through a Nasdaq American Depositary Receipt offering, marking one of 2025’s largest equity raises globally
- The offering consists of 17.79 million new ADRs with a 10:1 ratio to common shares; pricing finalizes Thursday with market debut scheduled for Friday
- Shares on Seoul’s exchange have skyrocketed roughly 273% year-to-date, despite a 4% pullback on Monday
- Capital raised will finance construction of semiconductor fabrication facilities in South Korea and acquisition of cutting-edge production tools, including advanced EUV lithography systems from ASML
- The company commands 56.4% of the worldwide HBM market and captures 29.1% of DRAM revenue as of Q1 2026
The South Korean memory chip powerhouse is making its way to American exchanges with what stands as one of the most substantial equity offerings globally in recent years. The semiconductor manufacturer initiated its Nasdaq ADR launch Monday, seeking approximately $28 billion in new funding to accelerate its artificial intelligence chip expansion strategy.
SK hynix Inc. (000660.KS)The offering encompasses 17.79 million newly issued American Depositary Receipts for Nasdaq trading. The ADR structure operates on a 10:1 basis, meaning ten ADRs correspond to a single ordinary share traded on Seoul’s exchange. Pricing details were scheduled for Monday’s release, with definitive pricing anticipated Thursday ahead of Friday’s trading commencement.
On Seoul’s exchange, SK Hynix stock declined approximately 4% Monday, closing at 2,327,000 won. The Monday decline notwithstanding, shares have climbed roughly 273% since January, propelled by robust demand for artificial intelligence-linked equities.
The Seoul-traded security (000660.KS) retreated about 3.4% Monday, mirroring wider market weakness — South Korea’s KOSPI benchmark index similarly dropped 2.2% during the session.
This transaction ranks as the second-largest equity raise on record, trailing only SpaceX’s extraordinary $85.7 billion public offering completed last month. The deal surpasses Saudi Aramco’s $25.6 billion IPO from 2019 and Alibaba’s comparable offering in 2014.
The chipmaker intends to deploy the capital toward constructing additional semiconductor manufacturing facilities domestically in South Korea and acquiring state-of-the-art production machinery, including extreme ultraviolet lithography equipment from Netherlands-based ASML.
The Strategic Value of U.S. Market Access
According to Dave Mazza, CEO of Roundhill Investments: “SK Hynix has been one of the most important companies in the world that most U.S. institutions could not easily own.” He characterized the Nasdaq listing as eliminating an “accessibility discount, not a quality discount.”
Steve Sosnick from Interactive Brokers noted that retail traders and smaller institutional players stand to gain the most, obtaining straightforward access to shares previously challenging to acquire from United States accounts.
HSBC upgraded its SK Hynix valuation model last month by incorporating a 20% premium into its price-to-book calculation, elevating it from 2.8x to 3.4x — attributing the adjustment to enhanced worldwide market access and investor-friendly corporate governance initiatives.
Market observers anticipate SK Hynix’s inclusion in the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index, which would likely generate substantial passive investment inflows as index-tracking funds adjust their portfolios.
SK Hynix’s Position in Artificial Intelligence
The company controlled 56.4% of the global high-bandwidth memory sector during Q1 2026 — establishing it as the worldwide leader. In DRAM, it secured second position with 29.1% revenue share, while capturing 18.5% of the NAND flash market in second place, based on IDC research.
First quarter 2026 revenue reached $34.5 billion, accompanied by profit of $26.48 billion. Full-year 2025 results showed revenue of $63.76 billion and profit totaling $28.2 billion.
The semiconductor manufacturer serves as a critical supplier to Nvidia and Google, and formalized a collaboration with Nvidia in July focused on jointly developing next-generation memory solutions for systems including Vera Rubin AI supercomputing platforms.
South Korea’s administration additionally announced a $576 billion semiconductor investment initiative last week, designating SK Hynix and Samsung as cornerstone participants.
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