A Korean bedding maker's biggest winner this year isn't its mattress line - it's the block of Samsung and SK Hynix shares sitting on its balance sheet.
It's one of the stranger side effects of the AI memory boom, where a company that sells beds is being carried by chip stocks it bought just last year.
Chip Stakes Are Outpacing the Core Business
The bedding business has been roughly flat - revenue actually slipped about 4.5% last year while operating profit edged up just 1.2% - while the chip stocks on the balance sheet have ripped higher on AI demand.
Allerman put roughly 13.3 billion won (about $9.7 million) into 30,000 Samsung Electronics shares and 17,132 SK Hynix shares last year. That combined stake is now worth close to 49-51 billion won, nearly four times the original investment, with unrealized gains that exceeded what its core bedding business earned in operating profit.
Samsung and SK Hynix are up sharply this year as data center builders fight for every chip they can get, turning what was meant to be a cash-management bet into something worth more than the cushions the company actually sells.
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How AI Memory Demand Is Lifting Both Chip Stocks
Samsung and SK Hynix make the high-bandwidth memory chips that AI servers can't run without, acting as the short-term memory an AI model uses to think - without them, the most expensive GPU on Earth just sits there.
Demand from data center builders has surged in response, pushing both stocks to record highs, with Samsung and SK Hynix each crossing the $1 trillion market cap mark this year.
This isn't a one-off in Korea, where the AI-driven chip rally has rewritten the math for any company sitting on Samsung or SK Hynix stock - whether picked up recently like Allerman or held for years as legacy positions.
Stakes that were quietly parked as cash-management bets have turned into the line item investors actually care about.
What To Watch
Two things matter from here: whether the chip stocks keep running, since that's what's holding the share price up, and what management decides to do with the position.
Selling, holding, or returning it to shareholders would each signal a different view of where the company is headed.
When side investments outperform the core business by this much, the market eventually reprices the whole company.
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