South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix announced plans to raise up to $29.4 billion on U.S. markets — money that will build factories in South Korea, not in America, while domestic semiconductor capacity withers.

A foreign company at the center of America's AI supply chain is about to extract nearly $30 billion from American investors to expand production overseas. That's not a bug in the system — it's the system working exactly as designed for everyone except the American worker.

SK Hynix is a primary supplier of high-bandwidth memory to NVIDIA and counts Apple, Microsoft, Dell, and HP as customers, according to Hot Hardware. The AI infrastructure this country depends on runs on Korean chips. Now the company wants American capital to fund Korean construction.

According to Reuters, cited by Hot Hardware, SK Hynix plans to use the IPO proceeds to "build out chip factories in South Korea and buy chipmaking equipment such as an extreme ultraviolet (EUV) scanner." The company's regulatory filing, per CNBC, stated the move would elevate "our status as a global company by broadening our touchpoints in the United States, the epicenter of AI technological innovation." Read that again: broadening touchpoints — not building capacity, not creating American jobs, not investing in American production.

If the offering hits its $29.4 billion target, it would surpass Alibaba's 2014 IPO to become the second-largest U.S. listing in history, behind only SpaceX's $85.7 billion raise earlier this month, Hot Hardware reported. Benzinga noted that SpaceX has since launched a $25 billion senior unsecured debt offering to repay bridge loans — capital in, capital out, with investors who bought at the post-IPO high now down nearly 25 percent.

The domestic picture tells its own story. Micron, one of the last American memory chipmakers, saw shares surge over 700 percent in the past year. But as Hot Hardware reported, Micron pulled its Crucial consumer brand last December to redirect supply toward "larger, strategic customers in faster-growing segments." American consumers and small businesses get squeezed while big tech and foreign suppliers eat the supply.

Follow the money: American investors fund Korean factories. Korean factories supply the chips running American AI. American companies pay Korean suppliers for the privilege. The dollars flow out; the dependency stays.

Who really owns the AI infrastructure this country depends on — and what happens when the answer is someone else?