Young on stocks
Young on stocks
US Tech Investor | AI News
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07-09 19:01

How I’m Looking at $SKHY’s U.S. Listing

Market Structure View on $SKHY The key point is simple: A 7x oversubscribed book proves that the primary market wants allocation. It does not prove that the secondary market has to keep bidding the stock higher. The real issue here is that the primary market and the secondary market are trading two completely different things. SK Hynix’s U.S. listing is huge. The basic facts are clear: 17.79 million new common shares. 177.9 million ADSs. 10 ADSs represent 1 common share. Demand reportedly exceeded available supply by more than 7x. Large U.S. institutional orders started around $200 million. Baillie Gifford, Coatue, Situational Awareness and other major funds have shown interest. That demand is real. But primary demand and secondary price action are not the same thing. The primary market is
How I’m Looking at $SKHY’s U.S. Listing

2026 First-Half Review: Pain and Reward, and Why Holding Matters Most

If I had to summarize my first half of 2026 in one sentence, I would say: It was a first half filled with both pain and reward. The reward was that I saw the opportunity in the memory sector early. The pain was that I got the direction right, but I did not truly hold on. The best decision I made in the first half of the year was starting to build a position in the memory sector in January, mainly through Micron. My thinking at the time was simple: As HBM prices continued to rise, DRAM and NAND were also entering a new pricing upcycle. The memory industry was likely moving back into a strong cycle. Historically, memory has always been a classic cyclical industry. Every few years, it enters a powerful upcycle. But this time is different. This cycle is not only driven by a normal supply-deman
2026 First-Half Review: Pain and Reward, and Why Holding Matters Most

The Two Most Important Nodes in the AI Supply Chain

The global AI supply chain may look massive, but the number of nodes that actually determine its direction is surprisingly small. If you think of the entire AI ecosystem as a transmission system, only two positions truly matter. One determines demand. The other determines sentiment and industry health. The first is NVIDIA. The second is memory. — NVIDIA Determines Demand Today, virtually all AI infrastructure spending revolves around NVIDIA. GPUs are the core assets of AI clusters. Whether it's hyperscalers, model developers, or telecom operators, their purchasing decisions ultimately flow back to NVIDIA's order book. That's why the market has long followed a simple rule: NVIDIA determines whether the AI supply chain gets paid. The moment NVIDIA demand shows signs of weakness, servers, PCB
The Two Most Important Nodes in the AI Supply Chain

The GPU Trade Is Not Over, But the Next AI Capex Wave May Move Into Networks

AI infrastructure is entering a new phase. In the first phase, the market was trading one question: Who has the most GPUs? Then the focus shifted to data centers. Who can secure enough power, land, cooling, servers, and deployment capacity? But now, the question is changing again. As AI Mega Clusters move from hundreds of thousands of GPUs toward millions of GPUs, the bottleneck is no longer just GPUs. It is no longer just power. The next bottleneck is whether multiple data centers can be connected into one unified AI training cluster. That is Scale-Across. SemiAnalysis recently published a deep dive on this topic. Their core view is clear: future AI clusters cannot rely forever on the expansion of a single campus. More cloud providers will have to connect multiple data centers, multiple c
The GPU Trade Is Not Over, But the Next AI Capex Wave May Move Into Networks

Memory Stocks Crash. Is the AI Bubble Finally Bursting?

Memory stocks got crushed today. The broader market sold off. And suddenly the same questions are everywhere: Is the AI trade over? Has the memory story peaked? Is this the beginning of the AI bubble bursting? Or is Wall Street finally waking up to reality? The funny thing about markets is that everyone feels like Warren Buffett during a bull run. Every gain gets attributed to skill. Every rally feels justified. But the moment volatility returns, conviction disappears. Investors who were comfortable buying after a 300%, 500%, or even 1,000% move suddenly become terrified after a 10% correction. Yet the reality is simple: A stock dropping does not automatically mean the thesis is broken. Price action and fundamentals are not the same thing. And when great companies become cheaper without a
Memory Stocks Crash. Is the AI Bubble Finally Bursting?

Why Does Bernstein Think $SNDK Could Be Worth $4,400? The Price Target Isn't the Most Interesting Part.

Bernstein just released what I think is one of the most important research notes on the memory industry this year. $纳指100ETF(QQQ)$ $闪迪(SNDK)$ Most headlines focused on one number: A Bull Case valuation of $4,400 for SanDisk. But in my opinion, that's not the real takeaway. The report spends far more time explaining why this memory cycle may be fundamentally different from every cycle before it. A year ago, when SanDisk was trading a fraction of today's valuation and most investors still viewed NAND as a deeply cyclical commodity business, Bernstein was one of the very first firms on Wall Street to publish a $1,000 price target. Back then, many thought it was far too aggressive. Looking back, they were simp
Why Does Bernstein Think $SNDK Could Be Worth $4,400? The Price Target Isn't the Most Interesting Part.

Why Micron's Earnings Could Decide the Next Phase of the AI Bull Run

$美光科技(MU)$ $闪迪(SNDK)$ $纳指100ETF(QQQ)$ Tomorrow's Micron earnings might be the single most important print in the entire AI supply chain this year. Most people think the market is just trading Micron. It isn't. What the market is really pricing in is how fast AI infrastructure spending will scale over the next two years. The AI Supply Chain Has Entered Phase Two Phase one was about GPUs. Phase two is about memory. For the past two years, the conversation was all about needing more compute. But as model sizes keep growing, inference demand has started to outpace training demand. The real bottleneck isn't just the GPU anymore — it's whether data can actually get to the
Why Micron's Earnings Could Decide the Next Phase of the AI Bull Run

Samsung’s Blowout Profit, SK Hynix’s Listing, and the Memory Selloff: This Is Not the End — It Is a Shift

Samsung’s profit surged 19x, yet memory stocks sold off hard. So what exactly is the market pricing in? Samsung delivered an almost flawless Q2 earnings guidance. Revenue is expected to reach 171 trillion KRW, while operating profit is expected to hit 89.4 trillion KRW, up nearly 19x year over year. This is not a normal cyclical recovery. This is a profit explosion driven by AI servers, HBM demand, and DRAM price increases. In theory, this kind of guidance should have ignited the entire memory sector. But the market’s reaction was the opposite: A sharp selloff. And that is exactly what makes today important. Memory stocks did not fall because Samsung’s earnings were weak. They did not fall because HBM demand suddenly disappeared. They fell because the market is shifting from pricing in ear
Samsung’s Blowout Profit, SK Hynix’s Listing, and the Memory Selloff: This Is Not the End — It Is a Shift

Yesterday, Micron proved AI demand is still accelerating. Today, the market sold the entire AI hardware trade?

If you only looked at today's price action, you might think the AI rally is over. $美光科技(MU)$ $闪迪(SNDK)$ $纳指100ETF(QQQ)$ $Applied Optoelectronics Inc.(AAOI)$ $Lumentum Holdings Inc.(LITE)$ Memory stocks fell. Optical networking stocks fell. Semiconductors broadly pulled back. Just one day after celebrating Micron's earnings, investors suddenly rushed to take profits. So what changed? In my view, not the fundamentals—only what the market decided to price. Yesterday, Micron delivered what was arguably one of the strongest earnings reports of the quarter. HBM demand remained exceptiona
Yesterday, Micron proved AI demand is still accelerating. Today, the market sold the entire AI hardware trade?

Storage Just Dropped 10%. I Think It's a Shakeout, Not the End of the AI Trade.

The past two trading sessions have been painful for semiconductor investors. $闪迪(SNDK)$ $美光科技(MU)$ The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index has fallen more than 10% in just two days, with every single constituent ending in the red. Yet the broader market tells a completely different story. The S&P 500 has remained relatively stable, the Dow has pushed to fresh all-time highs, and the equal-weight S&P 500 has also continued making new highs. Same market. Two completely different stories. That tells us something important: this isn't broad market liquidation. It's sector rotation. Capital is moving into defensive sectors such as healthcare, consumer staples, and utilities. More than 350 stocks in the S&am
Storage Just Dropped 10%. I Think It's a Shakeout, Not the End of the AI Trade.

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