Memory Chip Frenzy Sends SK Hynix, Micron Into $1 Trillion Club

The breakneck surge in memory-chip stocks is intensifying, sending the market capitalizations of SK Hynix Inc. and Micron Technology Inc. above $1 trillion for the first time, as investors bet the AI boom will lead to a sustained revaluation of the industry.

SK Hynix rose 9.3% in South Korea on Wednesday, taking its 12-month gain to more than 1,000% and becoming the third Asian company to join the $1 trillion club after rival memory-chip maker Samsung Electronics Co. earlier this month. Micron soared 19% on Tuesday, the most since 2011, after a UBS Group AG analyst said the stock may double over the next year.

The three leading makers of high-bandwidth memory now sit at the chokepoint of the global AI buildout, with their products forming a critical bottleneck for data-center expansion. Investors and analysts expect memory shortages to last through 2027, giving them unusual pricing power over the world’s largest technology companies.

“Memory chipmakers have been irrationally undervalued, but we are now seeing the trend of recovery in their valuation gap,” said Kang DaeKwun, chief investment officer at Life Asset Management in Seoul. “We are still at the early stage of the rally.”

In the fourth quarter of 2025, SK Hynix controlled 57% of global HBM market share by revenue, Counterpoint Research’s data show. Samsung and Micron followed with 22% and 21%, respectively.

SK Hynix

Fueled by gains in SK Hynix and Samsung, Korea’s Kospi index jumped as much as 5.1% on Wednesday, prompting the Korea Exchange to briefly halt program buying. The benchmark closed up 2.3%. The surge echoed a chipmaker-driven rally on Wall Street overnight and broader advances across Asian equities.

In April, SK Hynix reported a five-fold jump in quarterly profit, while anticipating that HBM demand will exceed supply in the next three years.