On-Prem

Memory price 'correction' is coming, world's fourth-largest DRAM-maker warns

DRAM drama or pricing karma? Whatever your view, kinked supply chains aren't helping


The world's fourth-largest memory maker, Taiwan's Nanya Technology Corporation, has predicted a price "correction" in late 2021.

Speaking at the announcement of the company's Q3 results last Friday, Nanya president Dr. Pei-Ing Lee said sales of consumer electronics, servers, and smartphone sectors remain sparky.

But demand is low as component shortages strike, exacerbated by COVID-related electronic factory disruptions across SE Asia.

High inflation and geopolitical tensions haven't helped matters either, by slowing the global economy.

"We are expecting the DRAM market [to] enter short-term, minor correction in Q4, 21," concluded Lee. Taiwan-based Nanya Technology is the fourth largest DRAM company and regularly ranked by industry analysts behind top market share players Samsung, SK hynix and Micron.

If DRAM prices do drop, it's good news for those still in the market for servers – memory can be the most expensive component of big boxen. It also has the potential to make next year's smartphone models a little cheaper, or memory-generous.

The news is less good for investors, as Samsung reported record-breaking group revenues this year on the back of memory prices and demand, despite challenges like the February 2021 shutdown of its Austin foundry fab.

Lee's statement reflects analysis from the likes of DRAMeXchange and Gartner. Last month a memo published by Gartner predicted "a significant price reduction" in memory due to oversupply and advised hardware manufacturers to design products with more memory or improve quality of other components if they want to continue charging their new normal prices. ®

Send us news
12 Comments

TSMC shrugs off impact of Taiwan earthquake

Nonetheless DRAM prices may yet feel slight aftershocks

NASA tries to jog Voyager 1's memory from 15 billion miles away

Since you can't get a soldering iron out there, the fix will be in software

Micron bounces back as AI drives up memory prices

'Our HBM is sold out for calendar 2024,' trills CEO

Samsung preps inferencing accelerator to take on Nvidia, scores huge sale

PLUS: Tencent's profit plunge; Singtel to build three AI datacenters; McDonald's China gobbles Microsoft AI

Chinese chip slinger found not guilty of stealing memory secrets from Micron

Fujian Jinhua escapes prosecution tho remains on the US sanctions list

Persistent memory to replace DRAM, but it could take a decade

Wham, bam, hello MRAM, FERAM, and ReRAM

Micron New York mega fab faces an environmental exam

At least the US Army is thinking about the frogs in those 226 acres of wetland

Samsung pins hopes on AI to return to growth this year

Next generation of devices are going to be packed with it – requiring lots and lots of memory

SK hynix posts surprise profit after AI boosts memory prices

This may be the best bad news we've had all year

Uncle Sam officially opens funding gates for silicon R&D

$5B investment part of $53B bet to reboot semiconductor industry

You're not imagining things – USB memory sticks are getting worse

It's all down to recommissioned kit, claim techies tasked with retrieving data from busted gear

Japan stumps up more cash for Kioxia and Western Digital to make memory chips

Pair still looking to merge after SK hynix blocked deal