Hanmi Semiconductor's shares climbed 28% in Friday Seoul trading after the company disclosed it purchased ₩50 billion ($33 million) worth of SpaceX equity through a private placement. The South Korean semiconductor equipment manufacturer did not specify the valuation or share class acquired, though SpaceX last traded at a $350 billion private valuation in December tender offers.
Hanmi manufactures wire bonding and assembly equipment for chipmakers, with 64% of revenue tied to memory chip customers including SK hynix and Samsung. The company reported ₩287 billion in trailing twelve-month revenue and operates on 18% EBITDA margins. The SpaceX position represents 11.4% of Hanmi's reported cash balance and 4.2% of market capitalization at Thursday's close. No debt was raised for the investment.
The disclosure matters for three reasons. First, it confirms that SpaceX is selectively allowing strategic industrials into late-stage rounds, not just sovereign wealth and crossover funds. Second, a South Korean equipment supplier taking aerospace exposure suggests supply chain principals expect sustained satellite infrastructure buildout regardless of terrestrial semiconductor cycle timing. Hanmi's customer concentration in memory makes it acutely exposed to China demand and Taiwan geopolitical risk—the SpaceX stake reads as portfolio diversification at the entity level. Third, the 28% share price response indicates Seoul equity markets are pricing SpaceX exposure at a significant premium to disclosed cost, implying retail and institutional buyers expect either a near-term IPO event or continued private valuation expansion.
Starlink has 7,008 satellites in orbit and is adding roughly 200 per month. The network requires semiconductor content in both satellite payloads and ground-station infrastructure, but Hanmi has not disclosed whether commercial agreements accompany the equity investment. If the position includes supply partnership terms, that would represent the first publicly known Asian semiconductor equipment supplier securing direct SpaceX exposure. The company's Friday filing contained no mention of board seats, commercial contracts, or follow-on investment rights.
Operators should monitor whether Hanmi's Q1 2025 earnings call in late April addresses SpaceX commercially or restricts commentary to financial investment. Any disclosure of chip assembly equipment supply into Starlink's satellite production would clarify whether this is passive capital deployment or strategic access. Watch for other South Korean industrials—particularly in advanced packaging or RF components—filing similar minority positions in the next 90 days. If this becomes a pattern, it suggests SpaceX is building an Asian Tier-2 supplier syndicate ahead of Starlink capacity expansion in India and Southeast Asia.
The filing included no lock-up language, but SpaceX private shares historically carry 12-month transfer restrictions and right-of-first-refusal provisions favoring existing investors.