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A South Korean Chip Startup Just Chose Seoul Over Wall Street. That’s the Interesting Part

Anderson Liam
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Rebellions, the Samsung-backed AI chip startup, is targeting an IPO in South Korea in the first or second quarter of next year, CEO Sunghyun Park told CNBC, leaning toward a listing on the KOSPI over the KOSDAQ. J.P. Morgan and Samsung Securities are preparing to underwrite the offering. “Real revenue is now being generated,” Park said, explaining why the company feels ready to go public. That timing detail – choosing to list at home instead of chasing a U.S. exchange – is what NewsTrackerToday stacks up against the standard playbook most AI chip startups have followed this cycle.

Park said Rebellions was also in talks with both the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq before settling on a Korean listing. His stated reasoning centers on alignment: investors, he said, prefer the Korea market specifically because Rebellions sits inside the Korean government’s own AI infrastructure push, one of the largest national commitments to AI buildout anywhere in the world. Rebellions is backed by Samsung, SK Hynix, and a fund tied directly to the Korean government, and it’s a core participant in Seoul’s “K-Nvidia” initiative to build a domestic AI chip champion.

Liam Anderson reads the capital-markets angle: “Rebellions raised $400 million in March at a $2.34 billion valuation, bringing total funding to $850 million, and now it’s choosing a home listing over a U.S. one specifically because its investor base is concentrated in Korea already. That’s not patriotism, that’s just following where the existing cap table sits. A KOSPI listing means less friction, familiar regulators, and a shareholder base that already understands the government-alignment story better than most American public-market investors would.” That home-market logic is what NewsTrackerToday homes in on as the more mundane, and more accurate, explanation than a nationalist narrative would suggest.

The company’s actual product is the Rebel-Quad, a second-generation chip built from four Rebel AI units and designed specifically for inference – the compute-heavy process of running trained AI models rather than training them. That’s a deliberate contrast to Nvidia’s dominance in training hardware, and it puts Rebellions up against a growing list of inference-focused rivals including Cerebras and Groq. Founded in 2020, Rebellions closed a $124 million Series B in 2024, then a $250 million Series C last September backed by Arm and Samsung Ventures at a $1.4 billion valuation, before this year’s $400 million round roughly doubled that number in six months. Park has said memory supply, not chip design, is currently the company’s tightest bottleneck – the same high-bandwidth memory chips made by Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron that are in short supply across the entire industry right now.

Daniel Wu, who covers geopolitics and energy, unpacks the government angle behind the timing: “South Korea has staked real political capital on building a domestic AI chip champion capable of standing next to Nvidia globally. A KOSPI listing keeps that entire narrative inside Korean capital markets, rather than handing the symbolic win to a U.S. exchange. For a company this closely tied to a national industrial strategy, where it lists is itself a policy statement, not just a financing decision.” That policy dimension is what NewsTrackerToday charts as the layer underneath an otherwise ordinary IPO-timing story.

The U.S. push hasn’t slowed down in the meantime. Rebellions has already stood up entities in the U.S., Japan, Saudi Arabia, and Taiwan, and it’s courting Meta and xAI specifically as customers rather than the hyperscalers that dominate most chip-supply headlines. Two new products, RebelRack and RebelPOD, round out the pitch: RebelRack packages the chips into a production-ready inference unit, and RebelPOD clusters multiple racks together for large-scale deployment. Saudi Arabia’s Aramco is also among Rebellions’ investors, a detail that fits the same pattern Wu describes – a company using government-adjacent capital in multiple countries at once, while still choosing to list at home.

None of this guarantees the IPO happens on schedule. Rebellions hasn’t disclosed sales figures, describing only a “strong revenue pipeline,” and a first-half 2027 listing window still leaves more than a year for market conditions, memory supply, or investor appetite for AI chip names to shift meaningfully in either direction. That open stretch of time, more than the KOSPI-versus-Wall-Street decision itself, is what News Tracker Today leaves as the real variable standing between now and an actual listing.

Three things worth watching as the IPO timeline firms up: whether Rebellions discloses actual revenue figures before the listing, rather than continuing to describe the pipeline only in qualitative terms; whether the memory supply constraint eases enough to support the production volumes a public listing would put under scrutiny; and whether other South Korean AI chip and infrastructure names follow Rebellions toward a domestic listing instead of chasing a U.S. exchange.

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