By Hyunjoo Jin
SEOUL, May 4 (Reuters) – Shares of SK Hynix surged 13% to a record high on Monday, driven โby foreign buying, after some big U.S. tech firms โlast week hiked their investment plans for artificial intelligence data centres.
The South Korean โchipmaker outperformed bigger rival Samsung Electronics, which has been weighed down by the risk of a potential strike by unionised workers demanding a bigger share of the company’s AI-driven profits.
SK Hynix shares closed up โ12.52% to a record โ high of 1,447,000 won ($985.29) per share, outstripping Samsung Electronics’ 5.44% gain and the wider market’s 5.1% rise.
The โ Bank of Korea’s senior deputy governor Ryoo Sang-dai raised expectations that the current chip market boom would last longer than it did โin previous โcycles, echoing forecasts made by โSamsung Electronics and SK Hynix โduring their earnings conference calls last month.
All four of the U.S. tech giants including Alphabet, which reported results on Wednesday, signalled that spending on AI would not slow down, with combined outlays set to surpass $700 billion this year, up from around $600 billion previously.
In โparticular, Microsoft and Meta unveiled higher-than-expected โcapital expenditure plans for this year, partly โbecause of surging memory โchip prices, while expressing confidence in those investments.
“I โthink everybody knows that the cost โof these components, โparticularly memory, has skyrocketed. We are just in a stage where there’s just not enough capacity for the amount of โdemand,” Amazon said โon an earnings conference call last week.
($1 = 1,468.6000 won)
(Reporting โby Hyunjoo Jin, Additional reporting by Jihoon Lee; Editing โby Himani Sarkar and Ed Davies)