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SK Hynix at the Nasdaq market in New York

Kwak Noh-Jung, CEO of SK Hynix, a semiconductor and memory chip company, poses at the Nasdaq headquarters on the day of the company’s IPO in New York City, U.S., July 10, 2026.... Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tabRead more

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  • Companies

  • SK Hynix CEO expects industry's worst memory supply crunch in 2027

  • CEO sees demand outstripping supply beyond 2030

  • CEO says U.S. is among candidates for future wafer fab plant

SEOUL/NEW YORK, July 10 (Reuters) - SK Hynix (000660.KS), opens new tab Chief Executive Kwak Noh-jung said the global memory industry is heading for its worst-ever supply shortage ​in 2027, forecasting that demand for memory will continue to exceed the company's ability to produce it well into the next decade despite aggressive capacity expansion.

"We forecast that ‌next year will be the worst year in the industry's history from the supply perspective," Kwak told Reuters in an interview on Friday, the day the South Korean memory chipmaker began trading on Nasdaq.

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"Our customer demand continues to go up, while our capacity has limitations," he said. "We still forecast that customer demand will remain higher than our supply capacity even beyond 2030. But we are doing our best to solve the problem."

Kwak's comments follow a stellar debut for the South ​Korean chipmaker which has become a pivotal company in the AI supply chain by taking the lead in the development of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) used in Nvidia (NVDA.O), opens new tab chipsets.

Shares of SK Hynix were up ​13.3% at $168.85 on the Nasdaq on Friday afternoon.

U.S. WAFER FAB UNDER CONSIDERATION

Kwak also said the United States remains one of several candidates for future wafer ⁠fabrication investment, although no decision has been made.

He said the company would prioritize locations that can provide sufficient land, electricity, water and skilled workers at competitive manufacturing costs.

"If those conditions are met, the ​U.S., Japan and Southeast Asia are all under consideration," Kwak said. "Nothing has been decided yet. We are evaluating which location can provide the greatest business advantage."

Beyond expanding overseas, SK Hynix's main factories are in Icheon, ​where it is headquartered, and Cheongju, and it is also building a sprawling facility in the city of Yongin.

Both SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), opens new tab are participating in a plan by the South Korean government to double the country's memory chip production capacity within five years. That includes investment of 400 trillion won ($266 billion) each for chip production facilities in the southwest of the country.

The plan has rattled some investors, however, who worry it could expose the firms to ​greater risk should a downturn occur.

In the U.S., it is investing around $4 billion to build an advanced chip packaging factory in Indiana. It is also investing $10 billion to develop an AI solutions company ​in the U.S., aiming to find new AI growth engines.

AI DEMAND UNDER SCRUTINY

Even so, there is some speculation that the AI investment cycle is approaching a turning point, which has been responsible for the recent drag on chip ‌shares.

Concerns have ⁠mounted following reports that Apple (AAPL.O), opens new tab is seeking to diversify parts of its semiconductor supply chain to include Chinese suppliers, and that Meta (META.O), opens new tab is looking to commercialize excess AI computing capacity.

Industry executives and analysts, however, argue that memory supply continues to lag demand.

Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang said last month that shortages of AI memory would continue for several years due to strong demand, adding that SK Hynix would remain the company's largest memory supplier.

UBS likewise expects the global DRAM industry to remain undersupplied until at least the second quarter of 2028.

Similarly, Bank of America remains constructive on the AI investment cycle, estimating that global hyperscaler capital expenditure ​will reach about $851 billion this year and $1.15 trillion ​next year, supported by strong cloud backlogs, improving ⁠returns on AI investment and growing demand for compute-intensive AI applications.

The bank said the roughly $244 billion raised by leading hyperscalers this year largely reflects balance-sheet optimization rather than signs of funding stress, arguing that capital remains readily available to support continued infrastructure investment.

The optimistic view was reinforced on Thursday, when Micron ​said it plans to invest more than $250 billion in the United States through 2035, up from the $200 billion plan it announced last year, citing surging ​demand for memory chips in ⁠the AI era and President Donald Trump's push to strengthen domestic semiconductor manufacturing.

SURGE IN PROFITS AND SHARES

SK Hynix has been one of the biggest beneficiaries of the AI boom, thanks to its big bets on HBM, once scorned but now seen as canny. Operating profit hit a record 47 trillion won ($31 billion) in 2025, double what it made the year before and coming back from an operating loss in 2023.

Momentum has continued into this ⁠year. The ​April-June quarter is likely to be even more eye-popping, with an LSEG SmartEstimate putting operating profit at 65.5 trillion won.

The ​company's shares have also soared. While concerns about the sustainability of the AI share rally have resulted in an 18% slide for SK Hynix shares in the past two weeks, they are up more than sevenfold over the past 12 months.

Reporting by Heekyong Yang in Seoul; Additional reporting by Johann M Cherian and Ragini Mathur in Bengaluru; Editing by Edwina Gibbs, Kenneth Li and Matthew Lewis

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Kenneth Li

Thomson Reuters

Ken oversees global coverage of technology and media at Reuters. Based in New York, he steers Reuters coverage of companies that drive the global economy, entertainment and culture. As a reporter, he has covered the intersection of media and technology since 1996. His previous roles at Reuters include global media correspondent, U.S. tech, media and telecoms editor and editor of Reuters.com. Ken also previously worked at the Financial Times, helped found Recode and helped run Newsweek.

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