Hong Kong-listed memory and storage stocks surged on June 12, extending a regional semiconductor rally as AI-driven demand for chips continued to lift the sector.
Montage Technology Co. (澜起科技, 06809.HK) led the advance, jumping 7.07% to lead a broad rally in storage concept stocks on the Hong Kong exchange. GigaDevice Semiconductor Inc. (兆易创新, 03986.HK) rose 5.97%, while VSTECS Holdings Ltd. (伟仕佳杰, 00856.HK) added 1.88%.
"The storage sector is riding the coattails of the broader AI chip rally that has reshaped Asian equity markets this year," said Kevin Ip, a Hong Kong equities analyst. "Memory and storage names are benefiting from the same structural demand story — AI workloads require massive data throughput, which drives demand for both high-bandwidth memory and traditional storage solutions."
The rally in Hong Kong storage names mirrors a regional trend that has seen semiconductor stocks dominate Asian equity benchmarks. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. has gained 52% this year, while Samsung Electronics Co. and SK Hynix Inc. have surged 159% and 184% respectively, according to Reuters data. Those three companies now account for almost a third of the MSCI Asia Pacific ex-Japan Index, creating what HSBC has described as "structural challenges" for active fund managers.
AI Demand Fuels Storage Sector Momentum
The storage sector's gains come as institutional investors increasingly look beyond the largest AI chipmakers to smaller names along the supply chain. Aberdeen Investments has added positions in mid-sized chip equipment suppliers, while Jupiter Asset Management has allocated nearly half of its Asia Equity Income fund to Taiwan and South Korea, including holdings in Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. and Quanta Computer Inc.
Montage Technology, a Shanghai-based fabless semiconductor company listed in Hong Kong, designs memory interface chips and server platforms that benefit directly from data center expansion. GigaDevice, also headquartered in Shanghai, specializes in NOR Flash and NAND Flash memory products used in automotive, industrial and consumer electronics applications.
The rally in Hong Kong storage stocks also tracked strength in mainland A-share markets, where semiconductor names have been among the best performers this year. The Shanghai Composite Index and CSI 300 have both benefited from policy support for China's domestic chip industry, including tax incentives and state-backed investment funds aimed at reducing reliance on foreign semiconductor technology.
Cross-Asset Context
The Hang Seng Index's technology sector has been a bright spot in an otherwise mixed year for Hong Kong equities. While the broader HSI has faced headwinds from China's uneven economic recovery and persistent deflationary pressures, tech and semiconductor names have attracted investor capital drawn to the AI theme.
The U.S. dollar's recent weakness against the Chinese yuan has also supported Hong Kong-listed tech stocks, as a softer greenback reduces currency hedging costs for international investors. The USD/CNH pair traded near 7.25 on June 12, according to market data.
Trading volumes in Hong Kong's semiconductor and technology names have picked up in recent sessions, though official turnover data for the June 12 session was not yet available at the time of writing.
The rally in memory stocks underscores a broader shift in Asian equity markets, where AI-related names have become the dominant driver of returns. Bernstein has described the concentration risk in Asian equities as "unprecedented," with the relentless AI rally since April creating distortions that have forced active fund managers to sell their best-performing positions to comply with portfolio concentration limits.
For Hong Kong-listed storage names, the key question is whether the AI-driven demand cycle can sustain momentum through the second half of 2026. Memory chip prices have historically been cyclical, with boom-bust cycles driven by supply-demand imbalances. However, the structural shift toward AI workloads — which require exponentially more memory bandwidth than traditional computing — may provide a more durable demand base than previous cycles.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.