Something unusual happened in South Korea’s equity market this month. SK Hynix, a company that spent decades playing second fiddle to Samsung Electronics, quietly surpassed it to become the country’s most valuable listed company. Its market capitalization hit 2,080.4 trillion won, roughly $1.35 trillion, on June 23. That’s not a typo.
The catalyst is high-bandwidth memory chips, the specialized silicon that powers AI training and inference workloads. SK Hynix shares have surged more than 300% year-to-date, a run that has single-handedly turned Seoul’s stock market into the global market’s most sensitive AI barometer.
The great Korean chip swap
SK Hynix controlled approximately 61% of the global HBM market in 2025, dwarfing Samsung’s 17% share and Micron’s 21%. In English: for every dollar spent on the memory chips that make AI possible, SK Hynix captured roughly three out of five of them.
SK Hynix’s operating profit more than doubled to 47.2 trillion won in 2025, fueled by insatiable demand from hyperscalers building out AI infrastructure. Prices for next-generation HBM4 chips have commanded a 20-30% premium earlier in 2026, pouring additional fuel on an already blazing fire.
When the Korean government announced major new AI and semiconductor investment plans in late June, Samsung shares fell around 4.8%. SK Hynix dipped about 1.6%.
KOSPI volatility tells a bigger story
On June 9, the KOSPI index surged 8.2% in a single session. The day before, it had plunged 8.8% after Broadcom issued cautious supply-chain guidance that spooked semiconductor investors globally.
South Korea’s total equity market is valued at roughly $4 trillion. The Korean government’s late-June announcement of AI and semiconductor investment initiatives, expected to attract hundreds of billions of dollars, was designed to cement the country’s position in the AI supply chain.
What this means for investors
The HBM4 pricing premium of 20-30% also deserves attention. If those premiums hold through the second half of 2026, SK Hynix’s earnings estimates will likely be revised upward again, potentially pushing its market cap further beyond Samsung’s.
Investors would be wise to track execution milestones rather than headline commitments. In a market that swings 8% on a single piece of supply-chain commentary, the gap between announcement and reality can be expensive.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

6 hours ago
25









English (US) ·