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SK Chief, Nvidia’s CEO Discuss Ways to Deepen AI Efforts

SK signage at the company's booth during the 2025 CES event in Las Vegas, Nevada, US, on Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2025. People flock to the gambling capital in the tens of thousands to soak up keynote events and fight through the throngs on show floors for a glimpse of some gadget that might be a harbinger of the future. Photographer: Bridget Bennett/Bloomberg (Bridget Bennett/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The chairman of SK Hynix Inc.’s parent and Nvidia Corp. co-founder Jensen Huang met Wednesday to discuss AI, suggesting the two companies are exploring ways to deepen one of the most important relationships in artificial intelligence hardware.

SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won and Huang talked about areas including moving artificial intelligence into the physical realm. Both leaders discussed SK Hynix’s high-bandwidth memory chips, which work with Nvidia’s AI accelerators. The Korean company has been quickening its pace of development to make sure it keeps up with Nvidia’s demands for faster evolution, Chey told reporters at CES in Las Vegas.

SK Hynix’s shares surged more than 5% in Seoul, extending a remarkable gain that made the Korean memory chip maker one of the industry’s best performers of 2024. It became the leading provider of essential memory to Nvidia during the post-ChatGPT AI boom, pushing aside longtime rival Samsung Electronics Co.

Huang has discussed extending AI into more of the physical world to develop tools that can “proceed, reason, plan and act.” That will transform industries worth $50 trillion, according to Nvidia. Chey said he told Huang at their meeting that South Korea, a manufacturing powerhouse, is uniquely positioned to work with Nvidia on that front.  

Both companies have benefited from the insatiable appetite that major companies and governments have for Nvidia’s chips, the gold standard for training AI algorithms.

SK Group is now focusing on AI data centers to drive future growth, part of a strategy to transform South Korea’s second biggest conglomerate into a technology-driven business. 

SK Hynix’s exhibition at CES highlighted the company’s most advanced HBM chips — 16-layer HBM3E — as well as enterprise data storage solutions for data centers.

(Updates with share action from the third paragraph)

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