SK Hynix (000660.KS), the world's second-largest memory-chip maker and the dominant supplier of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) for AI accelerators, has confirmed it will list American depositary receipts (ADRs) on the Nasdaq Global Select Market as soon as July 10, seeking to raise up to ₩45.4534 trillion (about $29 billion, per Reuters). At the top of its range, the deal would rank as the largest ADR offering on record, surpassing Alibaba's $21.8 billion debut in 2014, per Reuters reporting (and confirmed by Yahoo Finance coverage).
For a global fund manager, the immediate question is whether this is simply $29 billion of dilutive new supply or a structural re-rating of the stock. The mechanics point both ways.
What the deal actually is
SK Hynix will issue up to 17.79 million new shares — roughly 2.5% of its approximately 712.7 million shares outstanding — via a third-party allotment, The Elec reported. Each common share will be represented by 10 ADRs, implying an ADR price of about ₩255,000 ($166), CNBC reported. The implied won figure is calculated off SK Hynix's June 23 close of ₩2.555 million per share. The ADRs are slated to begin trading July 10, with the corresponding new domestic shares listing on the Korea Exchange on July 29; the company has cautioned that the size and timing remain subject to U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission review.
Crucially, none of the proceeds are earmarked for working capital, debt repayment, or outside equity stakes — the entire raise funds capacity expansion, The Elec reported. SK Hynix has flagged plans to direct about ₩31 trillion ($20.1 billion) toward the first fab at its Yongin cluster, about ₩19 trillion ($12.3 billion) to the Cheongju P&T7 advanced-packaging line for HBM, and about ₩12 trillion ($7.8 billion) to extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) lithography tools. Those project budgets together exceed the raise, indicating the ADR proceeds will fund part of a larger multi-year capex program rather than the full bill.
The re-rating case
Global investment bank HSBC argues the listing addresses a persistent valuation discount. In a report cited by CNBC, HSBC said the Nasdaq presence could lift SK Hynix's value by as much as 20%, raising its target on the stock to ₩4 million ($2,600) from ₩2.9 million ($1,880) and lifting its assumed price-to-book multiple to 3.4 from 2.8. HSBC's reasoning: U.S. peer Micron Technology, the American memory maker, has traded at an average 35% premium to SK Hynix over the past 13 years, helped by "better access to US investors" and a more shareholder-friendly policy — a gap a direct U.S. listing could narrow.
The passive-flow argument rests on a Taiwanese precedent. TSMC (TSM), the world's largest contract chipmaker, has been NYSE-listed since 1997; Mirae Asset Securities analyst Yoon Jae-hong noted that more than 400 U.S. ETFs currently hold TSMC's ADR, separate from its Taipei-listed shares, per Chosun Biz. Mirae Asset estimates SK Hynix's ADR could enter funds such as the VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH), iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX), and the Nasdaq-100-tracking Invesco QQQ, generating roughly $340 million of semiconductor-ETF demand and $450 million of Nasdaq-100-ETF demand at a maximum 2.5% weighting — together about 2.7% of the issue size.
The open question
Index inclusion, the main passive catalyst, is not immediate. Korea Investment & Securities analyst Yeom Dong-chan said Nasdaq-100 reconstitution uses end-November data, putting possible inclusion in December, while the Philadelphia and ICE semiconductor indices run September reviews that require three months of listing measured at end-July — making 2026 inclusion unlikely, per Chosun Biz. Near term, demand fundamentals look supportive: SK Hynix shares jumped 12% after Micron's latest earnings, CNBC reported, as the memory up-cycle showed signs of extending.
The first read on whether the re-rating thesis holds will come at the July 10 debut and any ADR-versus-ordinary premium that opens up — a spread that, in TSMC's case, has historically triggered arbitrage flows between the two share classes.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Figures are sourced from the cited reporting; currency conversions use an approximate rate of ₩1,540 per U.S. dollar derived from the cited sources and are indicative only.
Sources: CNBC (June 26) · CNBC (June 24) · The Elec · KED Global · Chosun Biz · Yahoo Finance


