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Wall Street Found A New AI Play. It's A 117-Year-Old Japanese MSG Maker.

Published May 26, 2026
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Summary:
  • Ajinomoto controls more than 90% of world supply of ABF, a key material used in AI chips.
  • Hedge fund Palliser Capital is now a top-25 shareholder and wants the firm to raise ABF prices by more than 30%.
  • Ajinomoto stock is up about 3% in six months. Chip-material peers Ibiden and Resonac are up more than 60%.

The biggest hidden play in the AI chip world isn't a chip firm. It's a Japanese kitchen brand best known for making MSG.

And a hedge fund just chose to do something about that.

The Most Valuable Side Business In Tech

Ajinomoto has sold MSG since 1909. It still sells seasoning, frozen food, and noodles.

It also makes Ajinomoto Build-up Film, or ABF. ABF is a thin layer that sits inside the parts that hook AI chips to circuit boards.

Without ABF, modern AI chips don't work. No one else makes a real version of it.

Ajinomoto controls more than 90% of world supply. The kitchen brand is still bigger by sales.

But the chip side is the firm's most valuable growth engine. That's where smart money is moving.

We hunt down stories like this in Market Briefs every weekday morning. Markets you didn't know were markets, in five minutes a day, with a free 45-minute investing course thrown in when you sign up.

Why The Hedge Fund Just Bought In

London hedge fund Palliser Capital said on March 31 that it's now among Ajinomoto's top 25 owners. The fund built the stake over six months.

The exact size of the stake hasn't been shared. But the public pitch is loud.

Palliser's pitch to the board is simple. You have a near-monopoly, so charge for it.

The fund wants Ajinomoto to do three things:

  • Raise ABF prices by more than 30%
  • Break out ABF as its own unit so investors can see the numbers
  • Improve returns in the slower frozen food unit

The thesis lines up with the data. Chip-material peers Ibiden and Resonac are both up more than 60% in the past six months.

Ajinomoto is up about 3%. The Topix index is up about 12%.

Why The Market Hasn't Repriced It Yet

The gap comes down to what Ajinomoto shares. It bundles ABF into a "healthcare and others" unit. That unit hides how much the chip side makes.

Investors can see the food brand. They can't easily see the chip near-monopoly.

So the stock trades like a sleepy consumer name. Not a key AI vendor. That's the kind of gap funds like Palliser chase.

Wall Street is hunting hidden AI supply chain plays across the board now. The chip giants have already been priced.

Money is flowing to parts of the stack that haven't been priced yet. Korean chip makers are seeing the same. Samsung's chip arm is booking record profits from AI demand.

What To Watch

The next move is Ajinomoto's. It can break out ABF on its own, raise prices, and let the AI story drive the stock.

Or it can sit tight and risk Palliser getting louder.

Investors are watching either way. Hidden monopolies don't stay hidden for long.

For more under-the-radar AI plays, sign up for Market Briefs. Daily breakdowns, plus an investing masterclass bonus you get just for joining.

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