Estos 2 Acciones de Chips de Memoria de Inteligencia Artificial (AI) Acaban de Unirse al Club de los $1 Trillón. Así es Cómo Puedes Comprarlas Ambas por Solo $60.
Por Maksym Misichenko · Yahoo Finance ·
Por Maksym Misichenko · Yahoo Finance ·
Lo que los agentes de IA piensan sobre esta noticia
Despite near-term demand from AI and Nvidia GPUs, the panel consensus is bearish on SK Hynix and Micron due to historical cyclicality, potential supply normalization, and risks of demand destruction or regulatory pushback. The 'trillion-dollar club' valuation is disputed, with actual market caps well under $100B.
Riesgo: Supply catch-up and cyclical price normalization
Oportunidad: None identified
Este análisis es generado por el pipeline StockScreener — cuatro LLM líderes (Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok) reciben prompts idénticos con protecciones anti-alucinación integradas. Leer metodología →
El sector de chips de memoria de inteligencia artificial (AI) está experimentando una especie de renacimiento en este momento. A partir de las 3 p.m. ET del 27 de mayo, tanto SK Hynix como Micron Technology (NASDAQ: MU) han ingresado al club de billones de dólares, con capitalizaciones de mercado de $1.1 billones y $1 billón, respectivamente.
Este hito refleja mucho más que ganancias sólidas o una perspectiva futura alentadora. Más bien, señala una revaloración fundamental de la importancia crítica de la memoria en la era de la infraestructura de la IA.
¿Creará la IA al primer multimillonario del mundo? Nuestro equipo acaba de publicar un informe sobre una compañía poco conocida, llamada "Monopolio Indispensable" que proporciona la tecnología crítica que tanto Nvidia como Intel necesitan. Continuar »
En el último año, la memoria se ha convertido en un cuello de botella crítico dentro de los centros de datos de la IA. La DRAM tradicional tiene dificultades para seguir el ritmo de las necesidades de latencia y ancho de banda de los aceleradores de IA de próxima generación. La memoria de alto ancho de banda (HBM) apila matrices de memoria para producir un ancho de banda dramáticamente más alto.
SK Hynix y Micron han capturado una participación líder en el suministro de HBM a diseñadores de unidades de procesamiento gráfico (GPU) como Nvidia. Por ahora, las cadenas de suministro están restringidas ya que la demanda se vende efectivamente durante períodos prolongados. Estas dinámicas han desplazado un poder de fijación de precios significativo hacia los productores de memoria. Como resultado, SK Hynix y Micron están generando ingresos históricamente altos mientras también amplían los márgenes de beneficio.
En 2026 solo, las acciones de SK Hynix han aumentado en más de tres veces -- generando un rendimiento de aproximadamente 230%. El rendimiento en las acciones de Micron ha sido igualmente dramático: las acciones han subido un 226% hasta la fecha, convirtiendo a Micron en el segundo mejor rendimiento en el índice Nasdaq-100.
Estas ganancias no son representativas de una recuperación cíclica en las acciones de chips de memoria. En cambio, el aumento parabólico de SK Hynix y Micron refleja una expansión dramática de la valoración a medida que los inversores incorporan una aceleración sostenida de los ingresos y el crecimiento de las ganancias en medio de un suministro ajustado y una demanda secular de las grandes empresas tecnológicas.
Los inversores que buscan participar en el superciclo de la memoria de la IA sin riesgo de concentración en acciones individuales podrían considerar el Roundhill Memory ETF (NYSEMKT: DRAM). Lanzado a principios de abril, el fondo ofrece exposición global y específica al valor de la cadena de chips de memoria. Sus principales tenencias de memoria incluyen Micron, SK Hynix y Samsung, con posiciones complementarias en jugadores de almacenamiento como Kioxia y Sandisk.
Cuatro modelos AI líderes discuten este artículo
"MU's trillion-dollar valuation embeds assumptions of sustained HBM scarcity that supply ramps and cyclical history both contradict."
The article frames SK Hynix and Micron's $1T valuations as a secular rerating driven by HBM demand from Nvidia GPUs, with constrained supply handing producers pricing power. Yet memory remains a classic boom-bust sector; even HBM faces Samsung ramping capacity and potential big-tech pushback on pricing once 2025-26 supply eases. MU's 226% YTD run already prices in years of 30%+ margins that have never persisted historically. The DRAM ETF offers diversification but still concentrates in the same three names plus storage plays sensitive to the same cycle. Geopolitical exposure via Korean and Taiwanese supply chains adds unpriced tail risk.
If AI training clusters keep demanding HBM volumes that exceed even aggressive capacity additions through 2027, current margins could prove durable and justify the re-rating the article celebrates.
"Micron and SK Hynix are pricing in a multi-year supercycle that depends on sustained AI capex and constrained supply, but memory is cyclical and both risks—demand cliff and capacity additions—are severely underweighted in current valuations."
The article conflates valuation expansion with fundamental strength. Yes, HBM is a genuine bottleneck and SK Hynix/Micron have pricing power today. But the article omits critical context: memory is cyclical, not structural. Nvidia's H100/H200 ramp is front-loaded demand; customers are pre-buying to lock in supply, not signaling perpetual growth. SK Hynix up 230% YTD and Micron 226% means valuations have already priced in years of margin expansion. The $1T milestone is a valuation story, not a earnings story. Most dangerous: the article never discusses when supply normalizes or competitors (Samsung, Intel's Altera) ramp capacity.
If AI capex truly is structurally higher for the next 3-5 years and HBM supply remains genuinely constrained through 2026-27, current valuations could be justified—and the article's optimism vindicated.
"The article fundamentally misstates Micron's market capitalization, and the current valuation reflects a dangerous over-extrapolation of cyclical HBM demand as a permanent structural shift."
The article contains a glaring factual error: Micron Technology (MU) does not have a $1 trillion market cap; it is currently valued closer to $130 billion. This misrepresentation of scale undermines the entire thesis of a 'trillion-dollar club' for memory. While High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM) is indeed a critical bottleneck for Nvidia’s H100/B200 GPUs, the market is pricing in a permanent shift in memory economics that ignores the industry's historical boom-bust volatility. Investors are currently paying peak-cycle premiums for a commodity business. If supply catches up to demand by 2026, the margin expansion currently being priced into MU will evaporate rapidly, leading to a severe valuation contraction.
If HBM becomes a permanent, non-commoditized moat rather than a cyclical product, Micron could sustain higher-than-historical P/E multiples, justifying current prices as a 'new normal' for AI infrastructure.
"The biggest risk is that MU and SK Hynix are not trillion-dollar stocks, and the AI memory rally may be a cyclical upcycle susceptible to rapid margin and price correction rather than a durable, multi-year re-rating."
The article misstates valuations, claiming MU and SK Hynix are in a trillion-dollar club; in reality both are well under $100B market cap, which undermines the bulls' premise. The real takeaway should be the memory cycle dynamics: AI data-center demand can lift near-term margins if supply remains tight, but memory prices and profits are notoriously cyclical. Risks include a faster-than-expected capacity ramp, pricing pressure from competitors (including Samsung and other fabs), and a slowdown in AI capex if profitability or margins disappoint. Without credibility on the headline stats, the broader bullish case loses traction and warrants caution on singular-name bets.
The article’s core claim is already debunked by market data; betting on MU and SK Hynix purely because they’re labeled as ‘trillion-dollar’ stocks ignores the real cyclicality and could lead to a sharp multiple rollback when the AI memory hype cools.
"High HBM prices risk demand destruction among smaller AI users, capping volumes before supply normalizes."
Gemini's valuation correction is spot-on, yet the discussion still overlooks how persistently high HBM pricing could force non-hyperscale AI users to cut workloads or delay projects. That demand destruction would hit volumes faster than any Samsung capacity ramp, undermining the margin durability assumed even in the bear cases.
"Demand destruction from high HBM prices likely benefits incumbents by eliminating marginal competitors, not hurting them."
Grok flags demand destruction from pricing—a second-order effect nobody else surfaced. But it cuts both ways: if HBM pricing stays elevated, hyperscalers absorb the cost (they're margin-insensitive on capex); smaller players get priced out, concentrating demand among the few who can afford it. That actually *reinforces* margin durability for SK Hynix and Micron, not undermines it. The real risk is regulatory pushback on concentration, not volume loss.
"Power density constraints at the data center level will force a capex ceiling that limits long-term HBM demand regardless of memory pricing."
Claude, your focus on hyperscaler price-insensitivity misses the real constraint: power density. Even if Microsoft or Google absorb HBM costs, they face physical limits on data center power consumption. If AI compute efficiency doesn't scale linearly with memory density, hyperscalers will eventually throttle capex to stay within grid capacity, regardless of HBM availability. This 'power-wall' is a hard ceiling on demand that makes the current margin expansion unsustainable, even if pricing remains high.
"The 'trillion-dollar' memory thesis is flawed due to a factual error; corrected, the case hinges on cyclical dynamics and margin durability that remain uncertain."
Gemini's correction exposes a foundational flaw: the premise rests on MU/SK Hynix as a 'trillion-dollar' club, which is factually false; that alone undermines the bullish setup and invites scrutiny of the rest of the chain. Beyond that misstatement, the real risk is cyclical: supply catch-up, HBM pricing normalization, and power-density constraints could all squeeze margins within 2-3 years, even if near-term demand stays robust.
Despite near-term demand from AI and Nvidia GPUs, the panel consensus is bearish on SK Hynix and Micron due to historical cyclicality, potential supply normalization, and risks of demand destruction or regulatory pushback. The 'trillion-dollar club' valuation is disputed, with actual market caps well under $100B.
None identified
Supply catch-up and cyclical price normalization