SK Hynix, Micron Solidify the Memory Chip as Runaway Star of AI

With back-to-back announcements this week, SK Hynix Inc. and Micron Technology Inc. have solidified the memory chip market as the hottest part of the AI industry.

SK Hynix disclosed plans earlier this week for a blockbuster stock listing in the US. The South Korean memory-chip maker is seeking roughly 45.45 trillion won ($29.4 billion) in an offering that will rank among the biggest of all time.

Micron followed with its quarterly report, delivering sales and profit forecasts that shattered analyst estimates. Shares of the largest US memory company soared, helping quell fears that artificial intelligence spending might slow. The reaction in Asian markets Thursday was swift, as SK Hynix, rival Samsung Electronics Co. and Japanese supplier Kioxia Holdings Corp. all added to extraordinary rallies over the past year.

“The memory industry has been structurally transformed by the proliferation of AI,” Micron Chief Executive Officer Sanjay Mehrotra said in a post-earnings conference call late Wednesday. “We are only in the early innings of the significant innovation and productivity that can be unleashed in every part of the global economy over time.”

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That’s buoyed Micron to be the biggest gainer in the benchmark Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index this year. Its shares have skyrocketed more than 300% this year, putting it on track for their biggest annual rally since 2009. Shares of SK Hynix have more than quadrupled since the start of the year, Samsung has nearly tripled, and Kioxia, which specializes in unglamorous flash storage that’s also seen an AI-driven surge in demand, is up close to 900% and now Japan’s most valuable company.