SK Hynix (SKHY) ADRs fell 13.7% on Thursday, dropping from a prior close of $176.46 to as low as $151.38, before recovering 3% to $156.79 in Friday premarket trading.
Trading volume on Thursday was heavy — around 54.7 million ADRs changed hands, down 16% from the average session volume but still well above typical levels for a volatile session.
The Thursday selloff wasn’t isolated. Memory chip stocks broadly came under pressure after TSMC’s latest outlook spooked the semiconductor sector, dragging SK Hynix down alongside peers like Micron.
Timing also played a role on Friday. The South Korean market was closed for a public holiday, which meant U.S. investors could pick up ADRs without worrying about what the domestic stock was doing overnight. That gave buyers a cleaner entry.
There’s a pricing quirk worth knowing here. Each ADR represents one-tenth of a South Korean share. At $156.79, U.S. investors are effectively valuing SK Hynix at $1,567.90 per share — a 27% premium to where the Korean stock trades. That gap reflects the size of the U.S. investor base and the friction involved in converting between the two instruments.
Despite the recent turbulence, analyst sentiment hasn’t shifted. Barclays initiated coverage this week with an Overweight rating and a $330 price target — more than double where the ADR currently sits. Singular Research upgraded the stock to Strong Buy on July 10.
The consensus on SKHY remains Strong Buy, with the average price target also sitting at $330.
Analysts backing the stock point to SK Hynix’s leadership in high-bandwidth memory (HBM) and growing demand from AI-driven data centers. Some also argue the company is moving toward higher-margin, contract-based products, which could eventually lead to a re-rating.
Still, there are real headwinds. China’s CXMT is preparing an $8.6 billion memory IPO, which has raised concerns about a wave of new supply hitting the market and squeezing chip pricing.
Leveraged ETFs tied to SK Hynix have also started appearing — Direxion recently launched SKHL, offering 2x daily exposure — which signals strong trader interest but also points to how stretched sentiment has become.
Korean retail investors have been aggressively buying into SK Hynix for much of the year, using tools like leveraged ETFs to amplify their bets. That dynamic has added to the stock’s volatility.
Barron’s has previously flagged SKHY ADRs as a potentially cheaper way to play the memory boom compared to Micron. SK Hynix ADRs were trading at a forward P/E of 5.71x as of Thursday’s close, against Micron’s 5.93x, according to FactSet.
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