By Heekyong Yang and Gregor Stuart Hunter
SEOUL, May 14 (Reuters) – SK Hynix is on the verge of topping a $1 trillion market value, just weeks after Samsung Electronics crossed the milestone, as āstrong demand for artificial intelligence places South Korea at the heart of Asia’s AI boom.
SK Hynix āshares have risen more than 200% this year, after rising an eye-watering 274% in 2025, driven by AI-related demand for both conventional memory āchips and high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chips used in AI servers.
Valued at less than $100 billion just 16 months ago, SK Hynix’s market capitalisation stood at roughly $942 billion at the close of trading on Thursday.
If SK Hynix reaches the milestone, South Korea would become the first country outside the United States to have more than one trillion-dollar company. Taiwan’s TSMC remains āAsia’s biggest company by market value ā at over $1.83 trillion.
The three chipmakers and their record earnings have put the spotlight on their critical role in the global AI supply chain, in contrast to Silicon Valley companies ā whose heavy spending on chips and technology makes them riskier bets.
On Thursday, SK Hynix shares closed down 0.3%, while the broader KOSPI ended up 1.75% at 7,981.41. The index has been on a tear, up more than 86% this year āafter āsoaring 75% in 2025 in its strongest annual performance since ā1999.
KB Securities raised its year-end target for āKOSPI, the best-performing major stock market in the world since the start of 2025, by 40% to 10,500 points.
“My theory is that the market is running on FOMO sentiments, especially on AI-related names in Japan and Korea,” said Fabien Yip, market analyst at IG in Sydney, referring to investors’ “fear of missing out” on potential returns.
BOOST FROM SAMSUNG WOES
Shares of SK Hynix could stand to benefit from labour woes at rival Samsung, although not over āthe long term, analysts say.
Samsung’s South Korean union, furious over what āit calls a massive gap in bonus pay with SK Hynix, āhas planned an 18-day strike from May 21 āif its demands are not met.
Samsung and its union failed to reach a pay ādeal this week. The company, however, has urged āfor talks to be resumed, āwhile South Korea’s Labour Commission has also called on both sides to hold another round of government-mediated talks on Saturday.
Analysts say Samsung’s rivals such as SK Hynix, Micron and TSMC could benefit from āspillover demand in the event of āa strike, but warn that a prolonged strike could eventually weigh on the broader chip supply āchain.
