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SK Hynix shares surge 13% on AI hopes as US tech stocks resume their climb

By Thomson Reuters Jul 14, 2026 | 7:55 PM

By Heekyong Yang

SEOUL, July 15 (Reuters) – Shares in SK Hynix jumped nearly 13% in Seoul on Wednesday, tracking gains in U.S. tech stocks after softer-than-expected U.S. inflation data, while upbeat analyst views on the outlook for AI memory demand also supported ​sentiment.

The rally lifted other South Korean semiconductor stocks, with Samsung Electronics rising nearly 8%, ‌while chip equipment maker Hanmi Semiconductor gained about 25% in early trade.

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq advanced on Tuesday as solid big bank results and a cooler-than-expected inflation report boosted risk appetite amid rising Middle East tensions.

The gains came after weeks of volatility in chip stocks, as investors grappled with concerns over a potential slowdown ‌in ​memory earnings growth as quarterly price increases moderate in the ⁠second half of 2026.

They have also ⁠questioned whether signs of slowing capital spending by major U.S. cloud service providers, rising financing needs and recent multi-billion-dollar capacity expansion plans by memory makers could eventually ease the industry’s supply-demand imbalance that has fuelled the chip stock rally.

However, some analysts remain optimistic that structural ​demand from AI applications will keep the market tight.

Kim Sunwoo, a senior analyst at Meritz Securities, said suppliers of DRAM chips, used for memory in computers, servers and mobile devices, were ⁠currently meeting only about 75% to 80% of demand ⁠as shortages intensified in the second half of 2026.

That fulfilment rate could ​fall to the 60% range in 2027, Kim said, adding that suppliers would still be able ​to meet only around 70% of demand even after excluding more speculative orders.

“With supply ‌shortages set to deepen, memory prices and earnings are likely to continue improving, supporting a strong rebound in the share price,” Kim said.

Echoing that view, HSBC said in a recent note that improving profitability of AI services should continue to underpin strong cloud spending.

The brokerage also said the ⁠industry’s shift toward three- to five-year long-term supply agreements should improve earnings visibility over the next two to three years and reduce earnings volatility.

Barclays added to the positive sentiment, initiating research coverage on SK ⁠Hynix’s newly listed American Depositary ‌Receipts (ADRs) with an “overweight” rating and a $330 price target. The ADRs surged ⁠nearly 28% to $193.92 on Nasdaq on Tuesday.

Goldman Sachs said in a recent ​note the ‌selloff in South Korean chip stocks had been amplified by the ​unwinding of ⁠positions in newly launched exchange-traded funds that are heavily skewed to one or two stocks, while the underlying semiconductor cycle remained fundamentally robust.

Reuters reported last week that SK Hynix Chief Executive Kwak Noh-jung expected the global memory industry to face its worst-ever supply shortage in 2027, with demand continuing to exceed the company’s production capacity well beyond 2030 despite aggressive expansion.

(Reporting by Heekyong Yang; Editing by Jamie ​Freed and Sonali Paul)