SK Hynix's stock dropped 7.5% on Tuesday, reversing sharply from the previous session's record intraday peak of ₩2,945,000. The pullback reflected a mix of profit-taking by investors who had benefited from the company's extraordinary year-to-date gains and headlines that the memory-chip maker planned to scale back production of high-bandwidth memory (HBM).
The previous session had seen SK Hynix eclipse Samsung Electronics to become South Korea's largest company by market capitalization. That milestone, coupled with the firm's more than 340% rally so far this year, left some investors moving to lock in gains at the top. Tuesday's reversal illustrates a typical post-milestone retracement, with market participants trimming positions after a prolonged run-up.
Market participants were further rattled by reports indicating SK Hynix intended to reduce HBM output in favour of higher-margin DRAM products. The move, if carried out as reported, could increase the company's near-term profitability by shifting production toward higher-margin inventory. At the same time, cutting back on HBM production may narrow SK Hynix's lead in the HBM market, where it has been a key driver of recent stock performance.
Compounding investor unease was a competitive development: Samsung Electronics disclosed its next-generation HBM4 memory chip, a direct challenge to SK Hynix's position in the high-bandwidth memory space. The emergence of a rival product at this juncture added an extra layer of pressure to sentiment.
Analysts have also weighed in on valuation questions after SK Hynix's market-cap milestone. A report from Hana Securities warned that the point at which SK Hynix overtook Samsung could act as a peak signal for the KOSPI, drawing a parallel to a past episode in which Cisco Systems briefly topped a major U.S. benchmark. While several analysts noted that the comparison is imperfect because of SK Hynix's solid earnings base, the commentary contributed to today’s negative tone.
Broader market conditions provided little support. The NASDAQ fell 1.3% overnight, dragging overall chip-sector sentiment lower, and the KOSPI slid more than 5%, prompting a temporary trading halt. South Korean markets were also affected by a report that the country will not be included in MSCI's developed countries index in an upcoming review, a development cited as an additional headwind for local equities.
Samsung Electronics, which had enjoyed strong gains in recent sessions, also fell sharply on Tuesday, mirroring the broader pullback among major Korean tech names.
Market takeaway - SK Hynix's sudden decline combined company-specific headlines about production strategy and competitive dynamics with wider market weakness and valuation concerns, prompting a significant retracement from a historic high. The reported shift away from HBM towards DRAM could lift margins but may reduce SK Hynix's advantage in the HBM market, while the broader sell-off in technology stocks amplified the move.