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#SKHynixADRIndicativePrice149
SK Hynix Just Pulled Off the Biggest Foreign IPO in U.S. History—And Wall Street Is Already Playing the Arbitrage Game
The numbers are staggering. $26.5 billion raised. A $149 per share pricing. Seven times oversubscribed. When SK Hynix opened its ADRs on the Nasdaq Friday under ticker SKHYV (switching to SKHY Monday), it wasn't just another tech listing—it was history in the making.
Here's what caught my attention: the ADRs opened at $170, a 14% pop from the $149 offer price. But that's not even the most interesting part. UBS has already come out with a bold recommendation to clients: buy the U.S. ADRs and short the Seoul-listed shares.
Why? The thesis is simple but compelling. U.S. investors are starved for direct exposure to the AI memory boom, and SK Hynix controls roughly 56% of the high-bandwidth memory (HBM) market—the chips powering Nvidia's GPUs and the entire AI infrastructure buildout. With Korean shares up 234% this year alone, a lot of upside is already baked in. But U.S. investors can't easily access Seoul-listed stocks, and the ADRs solve that problem.
The arbitrage opportunity stems from what UBS calls a "persistent premium." ADRs are cheaper and more efficient for hedge funds to hold than Korean shares. Less friction, more liquidity, and a massive pool of U.S. capital hungry for AI plays. UBS explicitly told clients this is "an extremely scalable trade" with limited dollar risk because the ADRs are unlikely to ever trade at a discount to the underlying Seoul shares.
What makes this IPO particularly fascinating is the timing. Memory chip stocks have been volatile lately—SK Hynix's Korean shares had dropped 25% in the three weeks leading up to the U.S. listing. Yet institutional demand still exceeded 7x the available shares. Global long-only funds and sovereign wealth funds piled in. That tells you something about conviction.
The company plans to use the $26.5 billion for new factories and equipment. Smart move. With AI demand showing no signs of slowing, SK Hynix needs every dollar to maintain its HBM dominance against Samsung and Micron.
This isn't just about SK Hynix. It's a signal that the AI infrastructure trade is far from over. When the largest foreign IPO in U.S. history—bigger than any before it—gets 7x demand despite recent chip volatility, that's institutional money telling you where they think the puck is going.
The UBS arbitrage play is already in motion. Whether that premium holds long-term depends on whether SK Hynix can keep executing on HBM while managing the cyclical nature of memory markets. But for now, the market has spoken: AI memory is the hottest ticket in tech, and SK Hynix just gave U.S. investors a front-row seat