Nvidia’s biggest RAM supplier just had a trillion-dollar debut on Wall Street

SK Hynix opened at $170 per share as it continues to benefit from a surge in demand for memory components.


As the AI boom boosts demand for RAM, SK Hynix — one of the world’s biggest suppliers of memory chips — launched on Wall Street Friday. The South Korean chipmaker opened at $170 per share and raised $26.5 billion, surpassing Alibaba’s record as the largest debut of a foreign company, according to reports from The Associated Press and CNN .
After reaching a $1 trillion valuation in May, SK Hynix briefly overtook Samsung as South Korea’s most valuable company. SK Hynix is one of three major companies benefitting from a surge in demand for DRAM and high-bandwidth memory (HBM). These components have become essential for the widespread buildout of AI data centers, as tech giants like OpenAI, Microsoft, and Google use DRAM for the servers to power their AI models, while HBM comes packaged inside high-end AI chips like Nvidia’s Blackwell Ultra.
As of June 2026, SK Hynix makes up 29 percent of the global DRAM market, with Samsung at 38 percent and Micron at 22 percent, according to data from Counterpoint . The three giants still can’t keep up with memory demand as they continue to prioritize high-paying AI customers over device makers who need the chips for phones , computers, consoles, and more. SK Group chairman Chey Tae-won said in June that the company plans to ramp up its memory chip capacity over the next five years to address a shortage that could last until 2030, Bloomberg reports .
More in: RAM price hikes: the latest on the global memory shortage
Verified source · The Verge
Reported by The Verge. Open the original for full media and formatting.
More in Funding
All news
FundingSK Hynix raises $26.5B in the biggest foreign IPO in US history, is urged to build new US fabs
The AI chip boom just produced its biggest Wall Street moment yet. Now SK Hynix and Samsung are being asked to build U.S. factories.
Read at TechCrunch
FundingSEBI Clears IPOs Of Zetwerk, Tonbo Imaging
SEBI issued an observation letter to Tonbo Imaging on July 6 and to Zetwerk on July 9, indicating the final go-ahead for their respective IPOs.
Read at Inc42
FundingMeta risks $12B EU fine over addictive Instagram and Facebook feeds
Meta is in breach of the EU's Digital Services Act (DSA), a preliminary investigation has found, over the "addictive" design of Instagram and Facebook. It's likely to be forced to redesign both apps and could face a fine of up to $12 billion. The European Commission said Meta "d…
Read at The VergeA First-Principles Theory of Slow Thinking and Active Perception
arXiv:2607.08196v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: As part of a series on first-principles modeling of cognitive functions, this paper attempts to provide a mathematical formulation of thinking and perception. It formally derives slow thinking or more generally, active perception,…
Read at arXiv cs.AI