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SK Hynix's US-Listed Shares Surge to 51% Premium Over Seoul Stock

Published Jul 14, 2026
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Summary:
  • SK Hynix's US-listed shares traded at a 51% premium to its Seoul stock.
  • The gap far exceeded the usual near-parity between listings.
  • Strong demand for the memory-chip maker drove the divergence.

A Premium That Blew Past Expectations

When a foreign company lists shares on US exchanges, they usually trade close to the price of the home-market stock. SK Hynix shattered that pattern.

The South Korean memory-chip maker's American depositary receipts closed with a 51% price advantage over the common stock in Seoul. Per the company's SEC filing, one ADR represents one-tenth of a common share. The offering itself was $26.5 billion.

Then trading started.

Monday, the second trading day, brought a 9.3% drop. Then Tuesday happened. The ADRs surged 27%, pushing the premium to 51%.

What Caused the Volatility

The big swing has a simple explanation: options trading kicked in.

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When the ADRs began trading on US exchanges, options on those ADRs also became available. Options let traders bet on where a stock will go, and they attracted a different crowd. The derivatives traders piled in, pushing the price well above the underlying Korean shares.

But there is a second story underneath the numbers. The market is nervous about artificial intelligence valuations. AI has been the driver of semiconductor stocks, and SK Hynix is a key supplier of high-bandwidth memory chips used in AI data centers. Some investors worry that spending on AI hardware is reaching a peak.

That concern showed up in the first-day drop. Then the options frenzy flipped it around. The result is a stock that is both expensive and volatile, with the US price completely disconnected from the Korean price.

What This Means for Your Portfolio

The SK Hynix listing is not just an anomaly. It is a test case.

Nelson Griggs, president of Nasdaq, said, "The success of this offering is spurring other international companies to consider the US for either initial public offerings or similar ADR sales." If a South Korean chipmaker can raise $26.5 billion and then see its ADRs trade at a 51% premium, that sends a signal. More foreign companies may try the same route.

For investors, that means more choices. International exposure without the hassle of buying on foreign exchanges. But there is a catch with ADRs: prices can drift far from the home-market stock.

Market participants anticipated the ADRs would trade at a premium relative to the Seoul-listed shares because of limitations on converting common shares into the US instruments. A 51% gap is extreme, and it will not last forever. Eventually, traders will find a way to close it, and that could mean sharp moves in either direction.

The bottom line: SK Hynix is a reminder that new listings can behave unpredictably, especially when options are involved. The AI chip story is real, but the price action right now is more about traders than about business fundamentals. Watch the trend, not the daily noise.

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