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Wall Street banks hit a $260 million jackpot on SK Hynix’s mega deal

Wall Street banks hit a $260 million jackpot on SK Hynix’s mega deal
Devesh Kumar
10 Jul 2026, 07:24 AM

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Citi (C)

Buy Citi. The article shows Citi earned the largest share of SK Hynix’s ~$26 0m fee pool, helped by being both joint global coordinator and depositary bank. That signals Citi’s equity-capital-markets franchise is winning AI-linked mega-deal mandates, and the fee rate (~0.97% of proceeds) is unusually strong. If AI-driven issuance stays hot, Citi should keep monetizing deal flow better than peers.

Key Risk: AI equity issuance cools fast, shrinking mega-deal volumes and fee pools.

Memory supply chain (MU)

Buy Micron (MU). SK Hynix’s ADR pricing at a premium and oversubscribed demand confirm investors are paying up for high-bandwidth memory tied to AI servers. That demand backdrop should lift sentiment and pricing power across the memory complex, benefiting MU as a direct beneficiary of AI memory capex and upgrades.

Key Risk: AI server demand weakens or memory pricing collapses, wiping out the AI memory premium.

  • SK Hynix banks earn $260 million as AI listing revives deal-fee pool this week.
  • Citi takes biggest share as SK Hynix ADR raises $26.5bn in US market.
  • SpaceX fee comparison shows banks paid more per dollar at SK Hynix sales.

SK Hynix’s banks earned nearly $260 million (approx. €226.8 million) in fees from the South Korean chipmaker’s US share sale, giving Wall Street a richer payday by percentage than last month’s record SpaceX listing.

The fee pool shows how strongly banks can still monetise the AI capital-raising boom, even when headline economics look thinner than in traditional initial public offerings.

SK Hynix raised about $26.5 billion (approx. €23.1 billion) after pricing its American depositary receipts at $149 each, turning investor demand for high-bandwidth memory into one of the biggest equity deals on record.

AI demand delivers a fee windfall

The fees on the SK Hynix sale equalled about 0.97% of the total amount raised, according to company filings.

That rate was higher than the 0.67% earned by bankers on SpaceX’s $75 billion (approx. €65.4 billion) listing, where fees totalled about $500 million (approx. €436.2 million).

The comparison matters because SpaceX was the larger deal and eclipsed Saudi Aramco’s 2019 record.

SK Hynix, however, gave advisers a better return on every dollar raised.

That reflects the strength of investor appetite for AI-linked companies, and the complexity of placing such a large overseas equity sale.

The deal also came during a powerful rally in memory stocks, with SK Hynix benefiting from its leadership in high-bandwidth memory used in AI servers.

Citi takes the largest share

Citigroup earned more than $70 billion (approx. €61.1 billion) from the SK Hynix transaction, according to a person familiar with the matter.

That was about 20% more than other banks on the deal, helped by its role as both joint global coordinator and depositary bank.

Bank of America, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan were also global coordinators.

Their presence underlines how important the transaction was for equity-capital-markets desks, where large technology offerings remain among the most attractive mandates.

For banks, the timing was useful. Equity issuance has improved as AI demand pulls capital into semiconductors, cloud infrastructure and data-centre supply chains.

But large listings are still not plentiful enough for advisers to ignore a fee event of this scale.

Premium pricing shows investor appetite

SK Hynix priced the ADRs at a 2.7% premium to its average Seoul share price over the previous three days.

That is notable because cross-border listings often need a discount to attract global buyers.

Demand was helped by the company’s position in the AI supply chain and by limited direct US-listed alternatives for investors seeking exposure to Korean memory chips.

The sale was also reported to have attracted orders well above the available shares, reinforcing the view that investors are still willing to pay for AI-linked growth.

The listing gives SK Hynix fresh capital for factories and equipment. For its advisers, it also proves that the AI boom is not only lifting chip stocks.

It is also reviving the fee pool around mega equity deals.