SK Hynix is paying banks roughly 0.5% of the proceeds from its US listing, people familiar with the matter said, as the $29.4 billion offering becomes a referendum on AI-chip demand after a single Meta announcement erased $569 trillion from Seoul's market.
"The fee structure points to competitive underwriting dynamics for one of the year's largest equity offerings," one of the people said, asking not to be named discussing private terms. Bloomberg News first reported the fee terms on Saturday.
The Korean memory maker plans to list American depositary receipts on the Nasdaq on July 10, aiming to raise as much as $29.4 billion to fund expansion. The 0.5% payout — below the 1% to 2% typical for US IPOs of this size, according to Dealogic data — reflects the deal's scale and banks' eagerness to win a mandate tied to the world's dominant supplier of high-bandwidth memory used in Nvidia's AI chips.
The listing arrives at a precarious moment. On July 2, Meta's plan to rent out spare AI computing power triggered a global semiconductor selloff that sent SK Hynix shares down 14.6% in a single session and dragged the Kospi down 7.89%. The ADR's reception will show whether the rout was a valuation scare or the start of a deeper reassessment of AI spending.
The chip rout that began July 2 erased 569 trillion won from the Kospi in a day, with SK Hynix falling 14.6% to 2,187,000 won and Samsung Electronics dropping 9.06%. Foreign investors sold 4.4 trillion won of Korean stocks that session alone, extending a 10-day selling streak to 34.7 trillion won. Korean retail buyers stepped in with roughly 6.5 trillion won of purchases — a show of local conviction that may not be matched by US institutional investors.
A $29.4 Billion Stress Test
SK Hynix's fundamentals remain formidable. The company controls 55% to 60% of the high-bandwidth memory market, the specialized chips that power Nvidia's AI accelerators. First-quarter revenue jumped 198% year on year while net profit surged 398%, producing a 77% net margin — extraordinary by any measure for a historically cyclical memory maker.
The bull case rests on supply constraints that analysts expect to persist through 2027. IBK Investment & Securities raised its SK Hynix price target from 1.8 million won to 4 million won even as the stock was falling, arguing that computing power remains scarce industry-wide. Samsung Securities echoed that view, saying AI demand continues to outstrip supply.
The bear case is equally straightforward. SK Hynix shares have risen roughly 800% over the past year, a rally that Edward Sheldon, a CFA charterholder, called unsustainable for a cyclical industry prone to sharp downturns. Memory revenue is forecast to reach $600 billion in 2026 and nearly $800 billion in 2027, up from $200 billion in 2025 — projections that leave little room for disappointment.
What the Nasdaq Debut Will Reveal
The July 10 listing will answer a question the selloff left open: whether global investors want to own Korean memory at these prices. A strong debut would validate the thesis that AI-chip demand is still accelerating. A weak one would confirm that the July 2 rout was not an overreaction but a warning.
The stakes extend beyond SK Hynix. Samsung Electronics reports second-quarter results within days, offering the next real read on whether AI-memory demand is cooling. A softening US labor market — the economy added just 57,000 jobs in June, well below the 115,000 consensus — shifts the odds on Federal Reserve rate cuts, which tend to lift high-growth, high-valuation trades like semiconductors.
For Latin American mining exporters, the outcome matters too. The AI build-out drives demand for Chilean copper, Peruvian copper, and Argentine lithium — commodities whose bull case is now tied to the same spending cycle that moves SK Hynix. When Seoul convulses, Santiago and Lima feel the tremor.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.