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Kioxia Shares Slump 12% as AI-Related Stocks Fall

TOKYO, June 26 (Reuters) - Shares of Japanese chipmaker Kioxia slid 12% on Friday after a report that ChatGPT maker OpenAI ​was considering delaying its initial public offering sparked a selloff ‌in AI-related shares.

Kioxia, previously called Toshiba Memory and carved out of Toshiba in 2018, is a major producer of memory chips. ​Its shares have surged as AI investment has boosted ​the chip industry, making it the most valuable ⁠company on the Nikkei 225 index.

But on Friday it ​was hit by a broader selloff after the New York ​Times reported that OpenAI is considering holding off on its IPO until next year as CEO Sam Altman seeks a $1 trillion valuation.

Kioxia said ​on Thursday it is considering a stock split and ​aims to list American depositary shares on a U.S. exchange at the ‌beginning ⁠of the next financial year, which runs until March 2028.

"Whether it's April, May, or June is not yet clear, but we're hoping to list... around that time," Chief Financial ​Officer Yoshihiko Kawamura ​said at ⁠Kioxia's annual general meeting.

Asian tech firms are looking to expand their investor base in the ​U.S., with chipmaker SK Hynix saying this ​week it ⁠plans to raise up to $29.4 billion through a U.S. listing.

"The timeframe to complete this offering suggests that (Kioxia) is highly ⁠confident of ​its ability to continue to ​produce outstanding results in the next 9-12 months," analyst Douglas Kim wrote on ​the Smartkarma platform.

Reporting by Sam Nussey; Editing by David Dolan

Source: Reuters


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