SK Hynix — the world's second-largest memory chipmaker and the leading supplier of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) to Nvidia — is moving toward a US listing of American depositary receipts (ADRs) as early as August 2026, with regulatory clearance from the US Securities and Exchange Commission expected during the week of June 22, Reuters reported (via Yahoo Finance, June 10). The company filed confidentially with the SEC in March; at the time, sources told Reuters the offering could raise as much as $14 billion.
For a portfolio manager in New York or London, the first question is simple: is this a real, near-term event — and what do I actually get access to? The answer is a direct US-traded line into a chipmaker whose shares, until now, have been accessible mainly through the Seoul listing or a thinly traded over-the-counter ADR. The stated rationale, per the reporting, is to broaden the shareholder base by reaching US institutions that are restricted to US-listed securities.
Sizing the offering. A roughly $14 billion raise (the figure attached to the March filing, per Reuters) would rank among the larger US equity listings of recent years — for scale, Alibaba's 2014 NYSE debut raised about $25 billion. Yet against SK Hynix's own valuation, the raise looks contained: the stock has surged 240% year-to-date and the company's market capitalization first crossed $1 trillion in late May, peaking near $1.12 trillion intraday, making it only the third Asian company — after TSMC and Samsung — to reach that mark (Yahoo Finance, June 10). On those figures, a $14 billion raise would represent on the order of 1.3% of market value.
Why the demand thesis holds. SK Hynix accounted for 57% of global HBM revenue in the fourth quarter of last year (Reuters via Yahoo Finance), the memory tier that sits beside Nvidia's AI accelerators. The company is Nvidia's largest memory partner — Nvidia buys billions of dollars of chips from it annually — and the two recently announced a multi-year partnership on next-generation AI data-center memory. That linkage is the engine behind both the share-price run and the timing of a listing pitched squarely at US AI investors.
A precedent worth noting. SK Hynix would be retracing a path TSMC took in October 1997, when it became the first Taiwanese company to list ADRs on the NYSE (ticker TSM) — a move that gave US investors direct, regulated access to an Asian chip leader and, over time, a far broader holder base. The open question is whether SK Hynix's offering structure and pricing reward that access, details the company says are not yet set: "SK Hynix plans to issue ADRs within 2026, but the details, including the size and timing, have not yet been decided," it said in a statement.
The wider AI footprint. The listing comes as SK Hynix deepens its cross-border AI ties. Affiliate SK Telecom (SKT) — Korea's largest wireless carrier — said on June 10 it is forming a roughly $500 million AI fund with Japan's NTT and Taiwan's Chunghwa Telecom, managed through a new vehicle, Catalight Capital, targeting AI data-center, chip and cooling startups; SKT said SK Hynix is preparing to participate (Korea Times, June 10).
What to watch next. The first hard confirmation is the SEC clearance reportedly due the week of June 22. After that, the terms that matter — final size, share-to-ADR ratio, exchange and pricing date — remain officially undecided, and the company has declined to confirm an August timeline. Those filings, not the headline, will determine what the offering is worth to an incoming US holder.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Figures are drawn from cited reporting as of June 10–11, 2026, and the offering's size and timing have not been confirmed by the company.



