Kioxia goes public in the US and splits shares in Japan

Published on June 26, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Japanese NAND flash memory chip manufacturer Kioxia plans to list its shares in the United States during the spring and execute a stock split in Japan. The strategy aims to capitalize on growing investor interest in companies linked to artificial intelligence. For the average person, this does not alter services or prices, but it opens new investment options in the technology sector.

Japanese semiconductor wafer fabrication cleanroom, Kioxia NAND flash memory chips being assembled onto circuit boards during automated pick-and-place process, robotic arms handling silicon wafers with precision, glowing AI neural network patterns projected above stock market ticker symbols showing US listing and Japan stock split, technical engineering visualization, photorealistic industrial lighting, blue and cyan ambient glow from cleanroom equipment, microscopic chip architecture visible through magnified overlay, dynamic split effect showing one chip dividing into multiple smaller units, ultra-detailed mechanical components, cinematic depth of field

The financial move to ride the AI wave 🚀

Kioxia is betting on the dividend of its shares in Japan to attract local capital, while the US listing targets international funds hungry for semiconductor exposure. The demand for NAND chips, used in data centers to train AI models, justifies the move. However, the company faces fierce competition from Samsung and SK Hynix, and memory prices fluctuate according to the global market.

Spoiler: your phone won't get faster because of this 😅

So, Kioxia is splitting in two in Japan and crossing the pond to sell itself on Wall Street. All very nice, but if you expected your old computer to fly like an F-35, bad news. This is pure number dancing on the stock exchanges. Investors are rubbing their hands together, while you're still waiting for a 4K video to load without stuttering. AI needs memory, but your wallet won't see it.