
SK Hynix’s US listing has been oversubscribed more than seven times, with global investors placing orders worth roughly $171.5 billion for the 177.9 million American Depositary Receipts (ADRs) on offer, according to Bloomberg. The South Korean memory chipmaker is set to raise about $24.5 billion, one of the largest US listings ever by a foreign company. Interim trading begins on the Nasdaq under the ticker SKHY on Friday, July 10, 2026, with regular trading starting the following Monday.
Here’s what’s driving the demand, the key details investors are searching for, and why crypto traders should be watching this debut closely.
Why Is SK Hynix Stock Rising?
SK Hynix stock has been one of the world’s best-performing large caps in 2026, up roughly 260% year-to-date at its peak, briefly pushing its market capitalization past $1 trillion and even overtaking Samsung Electronics on the Korean market.
The reason is high-bandwidth memory (HBM), the specialised chips stacked alongside AI processors in data centres. SK Hynix controls close to 60% of the global HBM market and is a key supplier for Nvidia’s AI hardware, including its next-generation HBM4 chips. With hyperscalers like Google and Microsoft buying memory as fast as it can be produced, SK Hynix reported gross margins near 79% in Q1 2026, extraordinary for a memory company.
One caveat traders should note: the stock has cooled sharply, closing about 30% below its June 25 record high before the ADR pricing. That pullback is why the final raise (~$24.5 billion) came in below the ~$29 billion initially projected.
Is SK Hynix Listed in the US?
Yes, from July 10, 2026. SK Hynix has long traded on the Korea Exchange (KRX) under the code 000660, but US investors previously needed a Korean brokerage account or thinly traded over-the-counter instruments to get exposure.
The new ADR structure changes that:
- Ticker: SKHY on the Nasdaq Global Select Market
- Structure: 10 ADRs represent 1 Korean common share, bringing the per-ADR price into an accessible range for retail investors
- Size: 177.9 million ADRs (equivalent to 17.79 million new shares, about 2.5% of outstanding stock)
- Anchor demand: long-only funds, sovereign wealth funds, and tech-focused institutions, with Baillie Gifford and Coatue among investors reportedly committing up to $7 billion
Is This an SK Hynix IPO?
Not technically. Because SK Hynix is already publicly listed in South Korea, the US offering is a secondary listing through ADRs rather than an initial public offering. In practice, however, it functions like an IPO for American investors, it is the first time they can buy the stock directly in dollars, during US market hours, through a standard brokerage account.
The listing is also widely seen as an attempt to close the “Korea discount”: SK Hynix trades at a forward price-to-earnings ratio of roughly 6.2x, well below US rival Micron and far below TSMC. Analysts also point to possible Nasdaq-100 index inclusion, which would trigger automatic buying from index-tracking ETFs.
What SK Hynix’s Listing Means for Crypto Liquidity
Yes, there is a reason why a chipmaker’s listing belongs on a crypto trader’s radar.
A $24.5 billion raise, with $171.5 billion in orders chasing it, is a snapshot of where global risk capital wants to be right now: the AI hardware trade. Throughout 2026, analysts have repeatedly linked Bitcoin’s decline from its October highs to capital rotating out of crypto and into AI-linked equities. Every dollar parked in the SKHY book is a dollar not sitting in crypto markets.
But there’s a second signal hiding in this story. SK Hynix itself fell 30% from its June peak before pricing, and Micron corrected sharply over the same stretch, signs the AI trade may be overheating. That sets up two scenarios worth watching after the July 10 debut:
- Strong debut (ADR trades at a premium): confirms institutional appetite for AI remains intense, and the liquidity drain on crypto likely continues.
- Weak or flat debut despite 7x oversubscription: suggests the AI trade is tiring at the margin, historically the kind of turning point where capital begins rotating back toward alternative risk assets, including crypto and gold.
Either way, SKHY’s first sessions, and SK Hynix’s Q2 earnings on July 29, will be among the clearest liquidity signals of the quarter.
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Key Dates to Watch
| Event | Date |
|---|---|
| Interim Nasdaq trading begins (SKHY) | July 10, 2026 |
| Regular trading begins | July 13, 2026 |
| Subscription and payment date | July 14, 2026 |
| New shares registered on KOSPI | July 29, 2026 |
| SK Hynix Q2 2026 earnings | July 29, 2026 |
FAQs
1. What is the SK Hynix ticker on Nasdaq?
SK Hynix trades on the Nasdaq Global Select Market under the ticker symbol SKHY, starting July 10, 2026.
2. How oversubscribed was the SK Hynix US listing?
The offering was oversubscribed more than seven times, drawing approximately $171.5 billion in total orders for the 177.9 million ADRs on offer.
3. How much is SK Hynix raising in its US listing?
Approximately $24.5 billion, based on pricing tied to the stock's recent Korean close, below the ~$29 billion initially projected due to a pullback in the share price.
4. Why does the SK Hynix listing matter for crypto?
Large AI-linked equity raises absorb global risk capital that might otherwise flow into assets like Bitcoin. The strength of SKHY's debut will indicate whether the AI-over-crypto capital rotation is continuing or losing steam.
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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Crypto and equity investments are subject to market risks. Readers should conduct their own research before making any financial decisions.


