S.Korea's ruling party seeks to ease capital-raising rules
South Korea's ruling party is seeking to make it easier for chipmaker SK Hynix to set up ventures to build factories with outside investors — a move that follows a government push to position the country as an AI powerhouse.
Members of President Lee Jae Myung's Democratic Party of Korea have proposed amending a law pertaining to "strategic industries with cutting-edge technologies" that currently forbids a subsidiary of a subsidiary from such a move.
If passed, chipmaker SK Hynix — which is a unit of SK Square which is in turn a unit of SK Inc — will be able to attract outside capital for its new fabs if it retains a stake of at least 50 per cent in such a joint venture.
The law primarily affects SK Hynix, the leading developer of high-bandwidth memory used in Nvidia's AI processors. Other major South Korean conglomerates maintain less direct control over their prized units, instead exerting control through a complicated web of cross-shareholdings.
SK Hynix raised $26.5 billion last week in a high-profile U.S. share sale, but is expected to need far more funds to finance aggressive chip expansion plans.
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