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Nvidia or SK Hynix Stock in 2026? Comparing Two AI Chip Giants as Analysts Weigh Risks and Rewards

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Chip behemoth Nvidia, the world's most expensive listed company and market darling, will release earnings Wednesday

Investors looking to add AI infrastructure exposure to their portfolios now face a fresh choice: Nvidia, the dominant maker of AI accelerator chips, or SK Hynix, the memory supplier that just completed a historic Nasdaq debut and now sits alongside Nvidia as one of the most closely watched names in the AI chip supply chain. Each offers a different way to play the same underlying boom, and analysts say the right choice depends heavily on an investor’s risk tolerance and time horizon.

Nvidia remains the clear leader in accelerated computing, commanding the largest share of the AI chip market and continuing to roll out new hardware platforms at a rapid pace. The company’s latest generation GPU platform, Vera Rubin, has generated what analysts describe as extremely strong demand. Nvidia’s dominance is reinforced by its CUDA software platform, which has built an entrenched ecosystem of developers and created a competitive moat that rivals such as AMD and Broadcom have struggled to fully close, even as they continue gaining incremental market share.

SK Hynix, by contrast, occupies a different but increasingly critical position in the same supply chain. The South Korean memory maker controls roughly 56% to 58% of the global market for high-bandwidth memory, or HBM, the specialized memory that sits alongside AI accelerator chips and feeds them data fast enough to keep up with processing demands. SK Hynix has served as Nvidia’s largest HBM supplier throughout the current AI buildout, a relationship Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang has publicly reinforced. “SK Hynix has been Nvidia’s largest memory partner and will continue to be our largest memory partner,” Huang said when the two companies signed an expanded multiyear technology partnership.

On valuation, the two stocks currently sit at very different levels. Prior to its ADR debut, SK Hynix traded at roughly 4.8 times forward 12-month earnings estimates, according to data from LSEG cited by CNBC, compared with an industry median of nearly 30 times and rival Micron Technology’s roughly 6.6 times. Nvidia, while not directly cited alongside those specific figures, has historically traded at a significant premium to memory makers given its dominant market position and higher profit margins, reflecting the market’s willingness to pay up for the company widely seen as the primary beneficiary of AI infrastructure spending.

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SK Hynix’s growth metrics have been extraordinary in their own right. In its most recent quarter, the company reported revenue growth of 198% to about $35 billion, a record level, with net income soaring 398% and operating margin reaching 72%. SK Hynix’s South Korea-listed shares climbed roughly 222% so far this year and as much as 800% over the past twelve months, pushing the company’s market capitalization to approximately $1 trillion and making it South Korea’s second most valuable listed company behind only Samsung Electronics.

Analysts remain broadly favorable on SK Hynix following its Nasdaq listing. Of 37 analysts tracking the stock, 35 currently rate it a buy, according to data from Investing.com. UBS has raised its price target for the Korean shares, citing long-term supply agreements that lock in a substantial share of expected volume and pricing. Former Wedbush analyst Dan Ives has grouped SK Hynix together with Micron and Samsung Electronics as what he called the “golden jewels” of the AI revolution, arguing that recent stock weakness across the sector has overlooked persistent underlying demand for high-bandwidth memory and tight industry supply.

Investment writer Edward Sheldon, writing for The Twelfth Magpie, offered a direct comparison of the two companies’ respective strengths, noting that SK Hynix’s close relationship with Nvidia and its dominant HBM market position give it a compelling growth case at a lower valuation multiple than Nvidia carries. He noted that both stocks currently look inexpensive relative to their projected growth rates, though he cautioned that memory remains a more cyclical business than Nvidia’s core accelerator chip franchise.

That cyclicality represents the central risk cited across nearly every analysis of SK Hynix specifically. Memory has historically moved through pronounced boom-and-bust cycles, with periods of shortage and elevated pricing eventually giving way to oversupply and sharp price corrections once manufacturers expand capacity to meet demand. SK Hynix’s own stock has already demonstrated that sensitivity this year, dropping roughly 12% in a single session in late June amid reports that Nvidia might trim production of an upcoming chip platform, before rebounding in the weeks that followed. CNBC’s Kristina Partsinevelos captured the industry’s most persistent caveat succinctly: “The longer term risk, though, is that memory has never really met a supercycle that didn’t eventually crash.”

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Nvidia, by comparison, has generally been viewed by analysts as less exposed to that specific boom-bust pattern given its software ecosystem and its position at the center of AI compute demand more broadly, though the company carries its own set of risks, including intensifying competition from AMD, Broadcom and custom chip efforts by major cloud providers, along with a valuation that assumes continued rapid growth in AI infrastructure spending industrywide.

Both companies also face questions about the durability of current elevated pricing. Partsinevelos noted that no significant new HBM supply is expected to come online before late 2027, a dynamic that should help keep memory prices and SK Hynix’s margins elevated in the near term, while also raising the stakes for what happens once that new supply eventually arrives. Passive investment flows could also provide a near-term tailwind for SK Hynix specifically, with some analysts estimating the stock could see as much as $14 billion in passive buying as it becomes eligible for inclusion in major indices such as the Nasdaq 100 later this year.

Ultimately, the choice between Nvidia and SK Hynix comes down to what kind of AI exposure an investor is seeking. Nvidia offers a bet on the continued dominance of a single company at the center of the entire AI accelerator market, with a software moat that has proven difficult for competitors to replicate. SK Hynix offers a more targeted, higher-growth bet on the memory bottleneck specifically, at a comparatively lower valuation, but with greater historical exposure to cyclical swings in pricing and demand.

As with any investment decision, analysts generally recommend that individual investors weigh their own risk tolerance, time horizon and overall portfolio diversification, and many suggest consulting a licensed financial adviser before making decisions based on any single company’s growth story, regardless of how compelling the underlying numbers may currently appear.

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Farnborough Airshow 2026 Finance Summit draws 600 investors

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Farnborough Airshow 2026 Finance Summit draws 600 investors

More than 600 senior investors from around 350 firms, including Goldman Sachs, Blackstone and the Qatar Investment Authority, will descend on Hampshire this month for a new Finance Summit at the Farnborough International Airshow, and for once the guest list is not reserved for the primes.

The Aerospace Global Forum: Finance Summit, launching at this year’s show, is designed to connect global capital with opportunities across aerospace, defence, space, cyber and enabling technologies, from the industry’s biggest names down to emerging start-ups.

For UK founders and scale-ups in the sector, that matters. The programme puts sovereign wealth funds, private equity houses, venture capital firms, hedge funds and M&A specialists in the same halls as the businesses hunting for growth capital, at a show where the 2024 edition generated at least £13 billion in deals for the UK.

Senior representatives are expected from Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan, Citigroup, Barclays, HSBC, Deutsche Bank, UBS, Blackstone, Carlyle, Warburg Pincus, Mubadala, the Qatar Investment Authority, Temasek International and Tikehau Capital, among others.

British institutions are on the list too, including the British Business Bank, the London Stock Exchange and UK Export Finance, the government’s export credit agency, a signal that the summit is as much about backing domestic suppliers as courting overseas money.

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Gareth Rogers, CEO of Farnborough International, said: “Finance and investment have always been underlying themes of the airshow, but we wanted to give it emphasis to support the industry as it accelerates. The launch of the Finance Summit is our response to the growing demand from investors seeking direct access to high-quality market insight, business development opportunities and emerging innovation across aerospace, defence and space.”

The timing is hard to fault. UK aerospace, defence, security and space industries contribute more than £42 billion a year to the economy, according to ADS Group figures, and ministers have been working to pull smaller defence suppliers deeper into the MoD’s supply chain through a dedicated growth unit. Capital, in short, is looking for a home in exactly the sectors where British SMEs are strongest.

Attendees have identified the conference programme, market trends, new business partnerships, existing partner engagement and visibility of new projects as their key reasons for coming, according to the organisers.

The summit will run keynote sessions, panel discussions, roundtables and dedicated networking as part of the wider Aerospace Global Forum, with the stated aim of connecting investors, banks and consultancies with organisations ranging from global primes to emerging start-ups.

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For a smaller business, the calculation is straightforward. Investor meetings of this calibre usually mean a trip to Mayfair or Manhattan and a warm introduction. For one week this summer, the capital comes to Farnborough instead, at what organisers expect to be the biggest show in the event’s history.


Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.

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At Close of Business podcast July 15 2026

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At Close of Business podcast July 15 2026

Sam Jones and Isabel Vieira discuss the bi-annual corporate finance feature.

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Maine Democrats, rattled by Platner’s downfall, protest fatal ICE shooting

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SpaceX Stock Closes at New Low

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SpaceX Stock Closes at New Low

SpaceX Stock Closes at New Low

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Hemab Therapeutics: A Cash-Rich Coagulation Franchise With Multiple Clinical Catalysts

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Hemab Therapeutics: A Cash-Rich Coagulation Franchise With Multiple Clinical Catalysts

This article was written by

I have a strong inclination towards high-growth companies, often treading in sectors poised for exponential expansion. My expertise lies in understanding and investing in disruptive technologies and forward-thinking enterprises. My approach is a mix of fundamental analysis and future trend prediction. I believe in the power of innovation to yield substantial returns and aim to provide insightful analysis on such companies here on SeekingAlpha.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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JPMorgan initiates Tango Therapeutics stock at Overweight

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Old Somerset cattle market could be turned into 100 new homes

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The former Yeovil cattle market site has been assessed for potential housing development

The former cattle market site, seen from Court Ash in Yeovil. CREDIT: Daniel Mumby. Free to use for all BBC wire partners.

The former cattle market site, seen from Court Ash in Yeovil(Image: Local Democracy Reporting Service / Daniel Mumby)

A former cattle market in Yeovil town centre could be converted into as many as 100 new homes if the site progresses under the new Somerset Local Plan.

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Somerset Council has recently begun the first phase of public consultation on its new Somerset Local Plan, which will determine where new housing and employment sites are designated until 2045.

As part of the Local Plan procedure, the council has published the results of its housing and employment land availability assessment (HELAA), which identifies every site submitted during the ‘call for sites’ in early 2025 (which invited developers, promoters and landowners to put forward sites for future development).

Among the sites included within the HELAA is the former cattle market south of the A30 Reckleford and Market Street – with local councillors suggesting it could accommodate up to 100 new properties.

Councillors Mike Hewitson and Oliver Patrick, who represent the Coker division near Yeovil, highlighted the issue in their latest monthly newsletter to their constituents.

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They said: “Councils are required to have up to date Local Plans in order to. demonstrate how they are delivering central government housing targets for their area.

“The HELAA process sits as a first stage in the wider Local Plan site selection process. It does not allocate sites or grant them planning permission or planning status of any kind.”

The cattle market was designated as one of the principal regeneration locations within the Yeovil Refresh regeneration scheme, launched by South Somerset District Council and supported by £9.75m from the then-Conservative government’s future high streets fund.

After the current Labour government took office in July 2024, the programme was restructured to enable the remaining funds to be concentrated on the Glovers Walk site and several smaller projects in the town centre.

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The cattle market component of the Yeovil Refresh programme was formally scrapped in August 2024, alongside any proposed improvements to the Poundland outlet at 72-74 Middle Street.

Hewitson and Patrick added: “The owners of the cattle market have submitted their land for consideration in the Local Plan. They have indicated it could accommodate approximately 100 homes.

“Could we finally see this major brownfield site finally come forward for redevelopment?”

In their formal evaluation of the location, the council’s own planning officers said the cattle market was “potentially suitable” for inclusion within the Local Plan as a “regeneration site” (i.e. one where central government funding could be targeted to unlock new homes).

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The officers added: “The site has been promoted for housing development and therefore is not considered available for economic development.

“The site is adjacent to multiple highways, so it is assumed that access could be taken from multiple points.

“The promoter has identified a few common constraints but anticipates that they can be overcome.”

A summary of the consultation responses is due to be published in early November, with the second round of consultation, incorporating further details of proposed development sites, expected to commence in September 2027.

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The third and final round of public consultation is currently scheduled for March 2028, after which the Local Plan will be submitted to the Planning Inspectorate, which may hold additional public hearings should it be deemed necessary.

If everything proceeds, the new Local Plan will be formally adopted on March 16, 2029.

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Meta Faces Lawsuit Alleging AI Tools Discriminated Against Workers on Protected Leave in Mass Layoffs

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Is Claude Still Down? Anthropic's Claude AI Chatbot Hit by

SAN FRANCISCO — Dozens of Meta employees have filed a federal lawsuit accusing the social media giant of using artificial intelligence systems to select workers for layoffs in a way that disproportionately targeted those who took maternity, medical or disability leave.

The 71-page complaint, filed Monday in U.S. District Court in the Northern District of California, was brought by 26 current and former employees who claim the company’s AI-driven performance evaluations penalized them for exercising legally protected rights to time off. The workers are among approximately 8,000 employees, or about 10% of Meta’s global workforce, notified of layoffs beginning in May.

Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, has disputed the allegations. “These claims lack merit and are not based on facts,” a Meta spokesperson said in a statement. “Workforce management and organizational decisions were and are made by people, not AI.”

The lawsuit alleges that Meta relied on a “constellation of internal artificial intelligence systems” — including AI performance ratings, keystroke and activity monitoring, productivity metrics and AI token-usage dashboards — to score, rank and select employees for termination. These tools, according to the complaint, failed to account for periods when employees were on approved leave, effectively punishing them for absences required by law.

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“Meta did not assemble the termination list through the considered judgment of managers who knew the work,” the complaint states. “Instead, the company used AI systems to score, rank and select employees for inclusion on the list.”

Plaintiffs include a scientist notified of her layoff just days before giving birth while on approved pre-birth pregnancy leave, an engineer who received a lowered rating due to time off for an injury, and a manager let go 16 days into medical leave. All 26 plaintiffs, who are proceeding anonymously as Does 1-26, had taken protected leave in the 24 months prior to the layoffs, the suit says.

Eight of the plaintiffs are women who took maternity or pregnancy-related leave, four are men who took parental leave, and another took leave to care for a family member followed by bereavement leave, according to the filing. The suit claims the practices violate the Family and Medical Leave Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act and various state laws.

The case highlights growing concerns about the use of AI in workplace decisions. Regulators and lawmakers in states including California, Colorado and Illinois have enacted rules in recent years to address potential bias in automated employment tools. The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has also stated that existing anti-discrimination laws apply when employers use AI for such purposes.

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Meta announced the latest round of job cuts in April as part of efforts to improve efficiency and redirect resources toward artificial intelligence development. Employees received notices starting around May 20, with departures scheduled through July 22. The company also reassigned thousands of other workers to AI-related initiatives during the restructuring.

The lawsuit points to Meta’s employee-monitoring program, introduced earlier this year, which captured keystrokes, mouse movements, browser history, messages, emails and location data on company devices. The program was intended to train the company’s AI systems on employee behaviors, according to internal statements attributed to CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

In an internal meeting reported by The Information, Zuckerberg said the AI models would “learn from watching really smart people do things,” noting that the average intelligence at the company was higher than what could be obtained externally for certain tasks.

Plaintiffs allege the monitoring program was rolled out with limited notice and little opportunity for opt-out, contributing to an environment where data collection fed into layoff decisions without proper safeguards for protected leave.

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The suit seeks a preliminary injunction to halt the finalization of layoffs for the plaintiffs, along with reinstatement, back pay, lost equity, benefits and other damages. Because of Meta’s arbitration agreements, the plaintiffs are not seeking class-action status but are pursuing individual claims.

Legal experts following the case say it could test how courts view the intersection of AI tools and employment protections. If the metrics used in decision-making inherently disadvantage workers on leave, companies may need to implement more robust adjustments or human oversight to comply with federal and state laws.

The controversy unfolds amid broader tensions at Meta over its aggressive push into AI. Employees have expressed concerns about surveillance tools, reassignments to data-labeling roles described internally by some as “draftees” work, and the overall pace of change. Petitions and internal protests have highlighted worries that AI initiatives are coming at the expense of worker well-being.

Meta has defended its approach as necessary for remaining competitive in the rapidly evolving technology landscape. In communications to staff, executives have emphasized flattening organizational structures, increasing ownership on smaller teams and leveraging AI to boost productivity.

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The company has paused aspects of its monitoring program at times due to internal data concerns and employee feedback, but continues to integrate AI deeply into operations.

This latest lawsuit adds to a series of legal challenges facing big tech companies over AI deployment. As tools become more sophisticated, questions about transparency, bias detection and accountability are likely to intensify.

For the plaintiffs, the stakes are personal. One researcher reportedly received her first “Meets Most” performance rating shortly after disclosing a disability and requesting accommodations, according to details in the complaint. Others describe lowered scores directly tied to leave periods.

The case is assigned to U.S. District Judge William Orrick in Oakland. Plaintiffs are seeking preservation of relevant data, models and logs, as well as an independent audit of the algorithmic selection process.

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Meta’s spokesperson reiterated that decisions involved human judgment and that the company complies with all applicable employment laws.

As the tech industry grapples with balancing innovation and worker rights, the outcome of this suit could influence how other companies approach AI-assisted workforce management. With AI adoption accelerating, similar disputes may become more common.

The plaintiffs’ attorneys from firms specializing in employment law argue that failing to adjust for protected leave in automated systems amounts to built-in discrimination. They call for greater scrutiny of “black box” AI tools in high-stakes employment decisions.

Industry observers note that while AI can streamline processes, it requires careful calibration to avoid unintended biases, particularly around sensitive areas like health and family responsibilities.

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Meta, with a workforce of around 78,000 at the end of the first quarter, has conducted multiple rounds of layoffs in recent years as it pivots toward AI. Previous cuts in 2022 and 2023 were larger in scale, but the 2026 reductions come as the company invests heavily in computing infrastructure and model development.

Zuckerberg has publicly stated that AI will transform many aspects of work, including at Meta itself. The company’s internal AI efforts include tools like Metamate, described as a large language model assistant, and “second brain” systems trained on employee data.

Critics within the company have raised alarms about the potential for these systems to create feedback loops that favor constant availability and high-volume output, metrics difficult to maintain during legitimate absences.

The lawsuit does not seek class certification due to arbitration clauses but requests the court issue a preliminary ruling preserving the status quo for the named plaintiffs while their claims proceed.

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Broader implications could extend to other employers using similar technologies. Employment lawyers advise companies to audit AI tools for disparate impact on protected groups and to maintain clear documentation of human involvement in final decisions.

As of mid-2026, the debate over AI in human resources continues to evolve, with calls for federal guidelines gaining traction alongside state-level regulations.

The case underscores the challenges of integrating powerful new technologies into traditional employment frameworks. For Meta and its workforce, the resolution may help define the boundaries of acceptable AI use in one of the most consequential areas of business operations: deciding who stays and who goes.

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Tesla Stock Is Falling. Can Robots Arrive Soon Enough to Save It?

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Tesla Stock Is Falling. Can Robots Arrive Soon Enough to Save It?

Tesla Stock Is Falling. Can Robots Arrive Soon Enough to Save It?

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Japan stocks higher at close of trade; Nikkei 225 up 1.49%

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Japan stocks higher at close of trade; Nikkei 225 up 1.49%

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