SK hynix Defies Gravity: Record 72% Operating Margin Driven by AI Supercycle

Desk

korocamia@naver.com | 2026-04-23 22:12:55


SK hynix, the world’s leading provider of high-performance memory solutions, has once again shattered industry expectations, reporting its highest-ever quarterly earnings for the first quarter of 2026. Despite the traditional "off-season" for the semiconductor industry, the company reported a staggering 72% operating profit margin, signaling that the artificial intelligence (AI) boom is entering a structural expansion phase rather than a temporary spike.

Historic Financial Performance
According to the earnings report released on Thursday, SK hynix recorded:

-Revenue: 52.5 trillion KRW
-Operating Profit: 37.6 trillion KRW
-Net Income: 40.3 trillion KRW

These figures represent an unprecedented leap from the previous year. To put this growth into perspective, the company’s operating profit has ballooned from 9 trillion KRW in Q2 2025 to 19 trillion KRW in Q4 2025, culminating in the current 37.6 trillion KRW. The net profit margin of 77% further underscores the company's extreme efficiency and the premium pricing power it commands in the AI memory market.

The Engine of Growth: From LLMs to Agentic AI
SK hynix attributed this stellar performance to the evolving nature of AI infrastructure. While the initial wave of AI investment focused on training Large Language Models (LLMs), the market is now shifting toward "Agentic AI," where AI agents perform real-time reasoning and task execution across various service environments.

"The demand base is broadening from DRAM to NAND," the company stated. "We have strategically expanded the sales of high-value products, including HBM (High Bandwidth Memory), high-capacity server DRAM modules, and eSSDs (Enterprise Solid State Drives), to meet the needs of global hyperscalers."

Addressing "Peak-Out" Fears: A Structural Shift
As spot prices for memory recently showed signs of stabilization, some analysts voiced concerns about a potential downturn in the semiconductor cycle—a pattern historically defined by a 4-to-5-year loop of oversupply and price crashes.

However, SK hynix CFO Kim Woohyun dismissed these concerns during the conference call, labeling the recent price fluctuations as a "temporary adjustment" rather than a peak.

"The current price increase is not a simple supply-demand imbalance but a result of a structural market shift," Kim explained. He emphasized that the transition to HBM production naturally limits the supply of general-purpose DRAM, as HBM requires more complex manufacturing processes. "With suppliers maintaining a conservative investment stance focused on profitability, we expect memory prices to maintain a solid upward trend through the second half of the year."

Global Expansion and Capital Strategy
Looking toward the future, SK hynix solidified its plans for its Indiana packaging plant in the United States, officially setting the start of operations for the second half of 2028. This facility is poised to become a critical hub for the advanced back-end processing of next-generation HBM products.

Furthermore, the company confirmed its pursuit of a U.S. listing via American Depositary Receipts (ADRs). "This move is designed to ensure our corporate value as a global AI memory leader is properly recognized while expanding our global investor base," said Kim. The capital raised through the ADR issuance is earmarked for massive infrastructure projects, including the M15X fab and the Yongin Semiconductor Cluster, as well as bolstering R&D capabilities.

Industry Outlook
By securing a dominant position in the HBM market and successfully navigating the NAND recovery through high-performance eSSDs, SK hynix has transformed from a traditional component manufacturer into a core infrastructure provider for the AI era. With a 72% margin, the company is not just riding the cycle—it is redefining it.

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