SK hynix opened a $28 billion American Depositary Receipt offering on Nasdaq, the largest equity raise by a memory manufacturer since Micron's 2013 recapitalization. The Seoul-based firm will direct proceeds toward high-bandwidth memory fabrication lines and advanced packaging infrastructure. The stock fell 3.38% in Korea on Thursday, closing at 129,500 won, as investors absorbed the dilution math against Q1 margin guidance.
The timing aligns with South Korea's Wednesday announcement of a $518 billion national semiconductor investment framework running through 2047. That plan includes four new memory fabrication plants, two from SK hynix and two from Samsung, plus a dedicated HBM packaging hub in Yongin. The government committed to halving standard construction approval timelines from 24 months to 12. SK hynix has not disclosed which of its planned fabs will receive ADR capital versus domestic loan facilities, though industry observers expect the Cheongju M17 line to draw heavily from the U.S. raise given its proximity to Nvidia's HBM4 qualification schedule.
The capital structure matters because HBM margins are compressing faster than the street models. Spot prices for HBM3E fell 11% sequentially in January, the first monthly decline since Q3 2023, as Samsung and Micron ship qualification volumes to hyperscalers ahead of revenue recognition. SK hynix holds roughly 53% of the HBM market by revenue, but that share is built on a cost base locked in during the 2022-2023 buildout. The new fabs will carry higher depreciation schedules and energy costs indexed to Korean industrial tariffs, which rose 8.2% in Q4. The ADR raise suggests SK hynix is choosing equity dilution over incremental debt to preserve balance sheet flexibility if HBM pricing decays before 2026 volume ramps arrive.
Allocators should watch three gates. First, the ADR's actual pricing and retail tranche allocation, expected between February 28 and March 7, will signal whether Fidelity and Vanguard see memory as cyclical or structural. Second, Nvidia's GTC conference in March will clarify HBM4 socket requirements for Rubin and whether SK hynix's 16-high stack remains specification or gets leapfrogged by Samsung's 24-high pilot line. Third, SK hynix reports Q1 earnings on April 24, and the operating margin guidance for Q2 will confirm whether HBM3E pricing has stabilized or continues bleeding. If operating margins fall below 38%, the market will reprice the ADR within the first month of listing.
The Seoul government now owns a clear stake in the outcome. The $518 billion framework includes $91 billion in direct state loans and tax deferrals, concentrated in memory rather than logic. That makes SK hynix's success a sovereign priority, not just an earnings story.