SK Hynix shares experienced a sharp 15% decline on Thursday following the South Korean semiconductor manufacturer’s disclosure of one of the nation’s most ambitious chip investment initiatives to date.
SK hynix Inc. (000660.KS)
The memory chip producer announced it will allocate 100 trillion won ($64.4 billion) toward developing new semiconductor manufacturing infrastructure in Cheongju, South Korea. Chief Executive Kwak Noh-jung unveiled the strategy during a ceremony featuring South Korean President Lee Jae Myung.
The majority of capital — 80 trillion won — will fund a next-generation NAND flash memory fabrication plant designated M17, slated for operational status by 2029. An additional 20 trillion won will support an advanced packaging facility expected to launch in late 2027. Ground-breaking for the M17 factory is scheduled to commence next year.
This Cheongju development represents a component of an expansive $2.1 trillion investment roadmap unveiled this week in coordination with Samsung Electronics. The comprehensive program encompasses a proposed chip manufacturing hub in southwestern South Korea along with numerous ongoing projects. The national objective aims to expand memory semiconductor production capacity twofold within a five-year timeframe.
Notwithstanding the optimistic investment announcement, both SK Hynix and Samsung experienced significant share price declines. SK Hynix concluded trading down 15%, Samsung retreated 9%, and the benchmark KOSPI index fell approximately 7.2%.
The widespread selloff stemmed from reports concerning Meta Platforms’ intentions to commercialize computing infrastructure, prompting investor concerns about potential saturation in AI-related capital expenditure. Market participants responded by retreating from semiconductor equities worldwide.
Earlier in April, SK Hynix had initiated construction on a separate advanced packaging plant in Cheongju dedicated to AI memory products, including high-bandwidth memory solutions. That project specifically targets immediate artificial intelligence market requirements.
SK Hynix acknowledged certain uncertainties in recent regulatory disclosures. The company indicated that long-range investment strategies remain subject to modification based on worldwide semiconductor demand trajectories and customer capital allocation patterns. Potential site selection complications could also affect project schedules.
Prominent investor Michael Burry, renowned for his profitable housing market positions documented in The Big Short, publicly challenged the magnitude of artificial intelligence investment in a newsletter to subscribers, as reported by the Wall Street Journal.
SK Hynix, Samsung, and Micron constitute the three dominant memory chip manufacturers globally. Pricing for NAND flash and DRAM products has reached record levels as artificial intelligence cloud providers fuel demand across all memory categories.
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