TLDR
- SK Hynix ADRs fell 6.8% to $180.65 premarket Wednesday after a 27% single-session surge
- The Tuesday rally was triggered by IBM CEO Arvind Krishna saying customers shifted spending to memory and storage
- After the surge, SKHY ADRs traded at 6.2x forward earnings — roughly in line with Micron
- SK Hynix controls roughly 56% of the high-bandwidth memory market, supplying chips critical to Nvidia’s AI accelerators
- A price gap between local Korean shares and ADRs could close on July 29 when mutual conversion is expected to open
SK Hynix (SKHY) ADRs dropped 6.8% to $180.65 in premarket trading Wednesday, as investors locked in profits following a stunning 27% single-session gain on Tuesday.
The Tuesday surge was sparked by IBM CEO Arvind Krishna, who said customers had shifted spending toward storage and memory products — a direct tailwind for SK Hynix.
After that run-up, the ADRs were trading at 6.2 times forward earnings, putting them roughly on par with Micron — a key reason some investors had previously bought the stock.
Part of the appeal of SKHY ADRs was that they looked cheaper than Micron on a valuation basis. Once that gap closed, the case for holding became less obvious.
The decline in the ADRs came even as SK Hynix’s Seoul-listed stock closed 8.8% higher in South Korea on Wednesday. The two haven’t moved in sync since the company’s U.S. debut on Friday.
Korean stocks have been swinging sharply, with local investors using leveraged ETFs to amplify moves in both directions.
SK Hynix made its U.S. debut as the largest-ever first-time American listing by a foreign company. Investor demand at IPO exceeded supply by more than seven times.
What SK Hynix Actually Does for Nvidia
The company controls roughly 56% of the global high-bandwidth memory market — the specialized chips that sit beside processors in Nvidia’s AI accelerators and allow data to flow at speed.
Without HBM, even the most powerful AI chips sit idle. That makes SK Hynix a genuine chokepoint in the AI hardware supply chain.
The company has been first to develop and qualify each new generation of HBM. For HBM4, tied to Nvidia’s latest Vera Rubin platform, supply chain estimates suggest SK Hynix will supply the majority of chips. In June, the two companies announced a technology partnership to align roadmaps going forward.
That lead doesn’t mean the competition is standing still. Samsung has pushed into HBM4 mass production, and Micron has been gaining market share. Both have been certified to supply Nvidia’s newest platform.
The ADR Premium and What’s Next
One overhang for U.S. investors is the pricing gap between Korean shares and ADRs. That premium topped 50% on Tuesday.
The Korea Securities Depositary is expected to allow mutual conversion between local shares and ADRs on July 29, which could close that gap.
Memory is also a cyclical industry. SKHY’s Seoul-listed stock soared over the past year, but memory stocks briefly entered a bear market just before the U.S. listing — a reminder of how quickly conditions can shift.
SK Hynix’s HBM demand is expected to remain tight into 2027. Samsung and Micron are both certified for Nvidia’s HBM4 platform and actively ramping production.
Stop guessing and start investing with confidence. KnockoutStocks gives you the AI insights, market intelligence, and stock research you need to spot opportunities, cut through the noise, and make smarter investment decisions — all in one powerful platform.
Sign up today and get 50% OFF full access to our premium stock picks.
Simply use coupon code SPECIAL50 at checkout to claim your exclusive discount.






Be the first to comment