SK Hynix is about to go live on the U.S. market, and Micron (NASDAQ:MU | MU Price Prediction) will no longer be the lone go-to option for investors looking to play the DRAM shortage. Undoubtedly, time will tell if SK Hynix, which will debut with an ADR priced at $149 per share, is coming to the U.S. market a bit late in the cycle. With recent volatility hitting the broad semi scene, questions linger as to whether more than just perfection is priced in when it comes to the world’s top memory chip makers.
Of course, they’ve got the triopoly, pricing power, and could continue to grow earnings at an absurd pace for years to come. But just how much of that bullish narrative is already baked in? And what’s it going to take to keep the share price appreciation going from here? Shares of SK Hynix have already gained more than 640% in the past year and about 1,750% in the last five years.
Despite the hot run, though, shares still look quite attractively valued, especially compared to the likes of a U.S.-based Micron.
SK Hynix is a premium memory chip titan at a fairly reasonable price
As to whether SK Hynix’s U.S. debut can help it move beyond the days of the South Korean discount remains the trillion-dollar question. In any case, it looks like SK Hynix is going to be coming in hot. And given its size, the big question is whether waves will be made as investors look to welcome another AI-driven behemoth into the mix.
Time will tell if a U.S. IPO is enough for SK Hynix to command a greater premium. In my view, there are a number of unique differentiators that make a fairly strong case for rotating from Micron into SK Hynix.
Apart from its very close relationship with GPU giant Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA), SK Hynix stands out as a more explosive play in high-bandwidth memory. Undoubtedly, Micron may have shifted gears to cater more to the big AI spenders and away from everyday consumers amid the latest boom in DRAM, but SK Hynix has already been flooring it some time ago.
Though it’s hard to tell, I do think that a lot of the recent volatility hitting the tech scene is more to do with profit-taking on the part of investors looking to get a piece of SK Hynix. With considerable oversubscription on the table and the potential for the opening day price to get a bit out of hand, I’d look to limit orders rather than placing market orders at the open.
SK Hynix could come in hot as it takes the title of the more explosive memory chip play
In my view, $175 per share can’t be counted out as the hottest new AI issue hits the ground running in its first day of trading in the U.S. market. Going into 2027, things could get really interesting for SK Hynix, as its new Yongin fab comes online by summer.
The massive factory is going to help inject a wave of new AI memory supply on the market. As AI demand stays overheated, though, it’s already looking like that supply is going to get snatched up as they come off the assembly lines.
In any case, it’s hard not to be excited about SK Hynix, even if giant question marks surround the future of memory chip demands, if something like TurboQuant, which uses algorithmic efficiencies to reduce demand, were to make bigger strides. It’s a major risk that SK Hynix highlighted, and it’s one that might be met with great unpredictability.
Could a company like Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG) and Google really derail the memory chip run in its tracks? Or will demand for the latest and greatest that SK Hynix has to offer stay hot in spite of any such breakthrough efficiency innovations?
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