Kioxia Surpasses Toyota to Become Japan's Most Valuable Company on AI Boom Wave
Kioxia Holdings, Japan's largest NAND memory manufacturer, has surpassed Toyota Motor by market capitalization and become Japan's most valuable company. This…
AI-processed from Bloomberg Tech; edited by Hamidun News
Kioxia Holdings, a memory chip manufacturer, surpassed Toyota Motor in market capitalization and became Japan's most valuable company for the first time in history — a vivid illustration of how the global AI boom is reshaping corporate hierarchies even in the world's most established economies.
Change of Leadership in the Land of the Rising Sun
Toyota held the title of Japan's most valuable company for decades — an undisputed symbol of industrial power and the country's global influence. The auto giant seemed unshakable: the scale of production, presence in all key markets, a reputation for reliability built over seven decades. Now its place has been taken by a NAND flash memory manufacturer whose products power data center server racks, smartphones, and solid-state drives around the world.
Kioxia began as a semiconductor division of Toshiba. In 2018, the company was acquired by a consortium led by Bain Capital, and at the end of 2024 it conducted an IPO on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The path to listing proved thorny: several date postponements, a pandemic, trade restrictions, cyclical downturns in the NAND memory market. However, Kioxia waited for its moment — and that moment was the global AI boom.
Why Capitalization Grew
Several factors converged simultaneously and pushed Kioxia's shares above Toyota:
- Shortage of enterprise-class NAND memory — AI server manufacturers are competing for volumes, and Kioxia is among the world's five largest suppliers
- Growing purchases from cloud giants — Microsoft, Google, and AWS are increasing flash memory volumes for language models and AI clusters
- Weak yen — makes Japanese exports cheaper for foreign buyers and increases profit when converted to the national currency
- Expectations of a new memory super-cycle — analysts forecast sustained demand growth at least through 2028 as AI infrastructure scales
- IPO effect — institutional investors who missed the placement aggressively bought positions on the secondary market
Together, these factors transformed Kioxia from a "recovering chipmaker" into a "pure bet on AI infrastructure" — how analysts describe the company's revaluation in 2025–2026.
What's Happening with Toyota
Toyota is not falling. The auto giant remains the global leader in vehicle sales and continues to generate one of the largest operating profits in the world. This is not about operational problems at the company, but about a structural shift in investor preferences toward the technology sector.
Global funds are increasingly betting on companies that power the AI revolution, not those that produce traditional physical goods. In this logic, Toyota is a business with predictable but relatively slow growth; Kioxia is a supplier of key material without which the AI revolution is physically impossible. Similar revaluation in the US already happened: Nvidia and Microsoft long ago surpassed industrial giants in market value.
The Japanese market is moving in the same direction — just with a few years of lag.
What This Means
For the first time in the history of the Tokyo Stock Exchange, a technology company — a semiconductor manufacturer — surpassed an industrial giant in market value. This is a signal: the AI boom continues to radically reshape corporate rankings far beyond Silicon Valley. Japan is returning to the global technology race — no longer through automobiles, but through memory chips.
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