Hanmi Semiconductor (042700), the Korea-listed maker of thermal-compression (TC) bonders — the back-end packaging equipment used to stack high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chips — said on July 2 that Chairman and CEO Kwak Dong-shin will personally buy an additional ₩5 billion ($3.6 million) of company stock. The shares will be purchased on the open market, with the acquisition scheduled for July 30, according to the company's disclosure as reported by Yonhap and Electronic Times (etnews). Once complete, Kwak's stake rises to 33.61% from 33.60%.
How big is this, really?
For a fund manager, the first question is whether a ₩5 billion buy moves anything. On its own, it does not. Market-data trackers put Hanmi's market capitalization at roughly ₩23.4 trillion ($17.1 billion) against about 94.85 million shares outstanding (stockanalysis.com). The July purchase therefore equals about 0.02% of the company's market value.
The cumulative campaign is more substantial in cash terms but still small in ownership terms. Including this buy, Kwak will have spent ₩69.5 billion ($50.7 million) of personal funds on 736,345 shares since 2023, per etnews. Those 736,345 shares amount to roughly 0.78% of shares outstanding — meaning three years of buying has lifted his stake by well under one percentage point. The signal here is the pattern, not the position: the chairman keeps writing personal checks even after the stock's multi-year run.
Why the timing matters
The purchase lands during what Herald Economy described as an earnings lull for the company, and just as its core product cycle turns over. Hanmi is the world's top supplier of TC bonders (Seoul Economic Daily), the tools that bond HBM's stacked DRAM dies, and it counts SK hynix, Micron and Intel among its customer base (Seoul Economic Daily). The company is now rolling out its "TC Bonder 4" equipment in line with HBM4 mass production and is preparing a second-generation hybrid bonder prototype in 2026.
In other words, the buy is framed as a confidence signal at the exact point when demand visibility for the next HBM generation is being tested. The company said the additional purchase reflects confidence in Hanmi's growth tied to its TeraFab supply target and a commitment to responsible management, according to Korean-language coverage carried by Investing.com and Financial News.
A repeat move, not a one-off
This is the latest in a steady sequence rather than a reaction to a single event. Kwak completed a ₩3 billion ($2.2 million) purchase on April 27, 2026, then disclosed an ₩8 billion ($5.8 million) open-market buy in May 2026 (Seoul Economic Daily), followed by the ₩5 billion planned for July. Each individual purchase has nudged his stake by only a fraction of a percentage point — Herald Economy noted one recent buy raised his holding by about 0.01% — underscoring that these are signaling gestures layered on top of an already-controlling stake, a buying campaign that began in 2023.
What would confirm or refute the signal
Insider buying is a statement of intent, not a financial result. The data point that will test it is Hanmi's next quarterly earnings and any order flow disclosures tied to the HBM4 ramp and TC Bonder 4 shipments through the second half of 2026. If HBM4-linked equipment orders materialize as the chairman's buying implies, the campaign reads as well-timed conviction; if the earnings lull persists, the buys will look like sentiment support rather than a leading indicator.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. All figures are as reported by the cited sources as of July 2, 2026; currency conversions use an approximate rate of 1 USD = 1,370 KRW.
Sources: Yonhap · Electronic Times · Seoul Economic Daily · Herald Economy



