Sk Hynix plans to invest up to 2028 $ 75 billion in slices
SK Hynix, SK group’s semiconductor arm, plans to invest up to 2028 103 trillion ($ 74.8 billion), confirming the group’s bet on a sector he considers to secure his business in the future. The group said in a statement today, that it will win about 80% of the amount, or 82 trillion, to invest in high -frequency memory chips. The HBM HBM SIMS has been improved for use with the artificial intelligence of Invidia. As part of her bet on artificial intelligence, SK Telecom and ‘SK Broadband’ 3.4 trillion were won in their databases’ work. Attempts to support and reform the plan come after the Chairman of the Bag Group, Che Tai won, and about 20 senior managers held annual strategic meetings to discuss the direction of the second largest business group in South Korea to Samsung. Executive officials have had marathon discussions over the past two days and discussed ways to reform the group, whose work also includes energy, chemicals and batteries. The risks are very high for CHE this year, as it has to drive one billion dollars to settle a divorce. The speculators bet he would take steps to support the group to pay the separation funds. Executive officials have decided that the ‘SK group’ is aimed at achieving 80 trillion that was won by operations and business reform by 2026. The goals also include that you acquired 30 trillion free cash flow within three years to maintain the debt ratio to the rights of shareholders less than 100%. The group, which lost ten trillion last year, expects 22 trillion to win before the year, according to the statement. It aims to increase it to 40 trillion in 2026. Although this is the first time SK has revealed its investment plans until 2028, the SK Hynix announced a large number of investment plans this year, including $ 3.87 billion to build an advanced mobilization factory and a research center for artificial intelligence products in Indiana. Within it spends $ 14.6 billion to build a new memory chips and move forward in other local investments, including in “Yongine Simkonddd”.