SK hynix to invest over $60 billion in chip plants in South Korea, but the memory crisis still seems a long way from being over

SK hynix, one of the three biggest memory manufacturers (along with Samsung and Micron), seems to be investing a lot of money into AI, and the South Korean government is happy to see that renewed investment. This time, it’s to the tune of 100 trillion won (or $65 billion as of the time of writing).

As reported by Reuters, SK hynix is looking to build new chip plants with that funding, one of which will be for storage chips. 80 trillion won (around $52 billion) will be spent on NAND flash memory production, and 20 trillion won (around $13 billion) will be spent on a chip packaging plant that is estimated to be operational by late 2027.

South Korea is becoming one of the major players in the AI boom. Just last week, South Korea’s president declared it will invest over half a trillion dollars into the AI chip industry, with SK hynix and Samsung accounting for much of that funding. And between them, they will be producing NAND and DRAM.

NAND memory is typically used just for storage, whereas traditional memory can be used in all sorts of applications. The memory crisis is putting a squeeze on pretty much everything, so SK hynix is likely looking to diversify as much as possible. It’s a lucrative business too. Just a few weeks ago, Biwin signed a multi-year $2 billion deal for NAND memory to put in its SSDs, and that spells bad things for the state of the memory crisis.

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