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SK Hynix CEO: Memory maker's value could double in 3 years amid AI demand

SEOUL (Reuters) — South Korea's SK Hynix could see its market value double in three years to 200 trillion won ($152 billion) through its memory chips especially for artificial intelligence, and by maximising investment efficiency, its CEO said on Monday.

As generative AI becomes more common, memory will become increasingly important, CEO Kwak Noh-Jung told reporters at the CES 2024 tech conference in Las Vegas.

As AI systems develop, customer demands for memory are diversifying, he said.

"If we prepare the products we are currently producing well, pay attention to maximising investment efficiency and maintaining financial soundness, I think we can attempt to double the current market capitalisation of 100 trillion won to 200 trillion won within three years," Kwak said.

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SK Hynix traded up about 1% on Tuesday, giving it a market capitalisation of about 100 trillion won.

SK Hynix was ahead of rivals in developing the latest in high bandwidth memory (HBM) chips used in the fast-growing field of generative AI, securing AI-chip leader Nvidia as a client.

The chips, known as HBM3, can feed more data into chips used for generative AI, enabling them to compute at high speed.

With rivals Samsung Electronics and Micron having developed their own versions of the next generation, called HBM3E, SK Hynix has consolidated its internal HBM capabilities to stay ahead, Kwak said.

As for when SK Hynix's production cuts might end, Kwak said "changes need to be made in the first quarter" for DRAM chips used in tech devices, signalling an increase in production, while for NAND flash chips used to store data, the chipmaker plans to respond to market conditions after mid-year.

Memory chip makers including SK Hynix and Samsung have engaged in extensive production cuts since early last year to weather the worst industry downturn in decades as high inflation dented demand for gadgets containing chips.

FILE PHOTO: Illustration picture of memory chips by SK Hynix
Memory chips by SK Hynix

However, during the fourth quarter industry No. 1 Samsung took in more supply of silicon wafers — the building blocks for semiconductors — signalling it was gearing up to increase production as memory chip prices rebounded.

(Reporting by Joyce Lee; Editing by Sonali Paul)