South Korean semiconductor giant SK Hynix (SKHY 9.32%) began trading in the U.S. market last Friday, and it had a successful debut. But that positive momentum was short-lived, and shares tanked today.
The stock plunged as much as 10%, and remained down by 6.3% as of 1:33 p.m. ET. Now investors want to know if it's time to buy or avoid the leading global memory-chip manufacturer.
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Why shares tumbled
SK Hynix shares had a strong debut in U.S. markets on Friday, with the American depositary receipts (ADRs) jumping 13%. But uncertainty surrounding artificial intelligence (AI) spending and potentially dilution from a new entrant into the AI stock sector led investors to sell global chip stocks today.
SK Hynix isn't an undiscovered name. Its South Korean shares rocketed 500% over the last year. With fresh coverage and a new listing, some long-term investors are taking profits. Investors now need to decide if the gains were already booked before shares were listed in the U.S.
The memory-chip boom hasn't been waiting for SK Hynix to trade domestically. Stocks like Micron Technology have rocketed even faster than SK Hynix in the last 12 months, gaining about 650%. The AI infrastructure build-out isn't in its final innings, though. SK Hynix raised $26.5 billion in its U.S. debut, and long-term investors shouldn't fear volatility in high-growth tech stocks. Revenue tripled year over year in the first quarter. Adding the ADRs to the tech portion of one's portfolio on today's dip is probably not a bad idea.





