Friday, January 19th 2024

Higher DRAM and NAND Prices this Year, if Suppliers can Control Output

TrendForce's latest analysis reveals that the downswing of DRAM contract prices, which had lasted for eight consecutive quarters since 4Q21, was finally reversed in 4Q23. Likewise, NAND Flash rebounded in 3Q23 after four quarters of decline. The persistence of this rally in memory prices during 2024 will largely hinge on suppliers' ongoing and effective control over their capacity utilization rates.

According to TrendForce Senior Research Vice President, Avril Wu, the first quarter of this year is already shaping up to be a season of growth, with TrendForce confirming its initial projections: a hike of around 13-18% QoQ for DRAM contract prices and a hike of 18-23% for NAND Flash contract prices. Despite a generally conservative outlook for overall market demand in 2Q24, suppliers in both DRAM and NAND Flash markets have begun raising their capacity utilization rates since the end of 4Q23. Furthermore, NAND Flash buyers are anticipated to complete their inventory restocking in advance in 1Q24. Due to the rise in capacity utilization rates and earlier restocking efforts, leading to a more moderated QoQ price increase of 3-8% for both DRAM and NAND Flash contract prices for 2Q24.
As for 3Q24, the period will see the arrival of the traditional peak season, and North American CSPs are expected to become more energetic in restocking key components. DRAM and NAND Flash contract prices could continue to climb and show a wider QoQ increase of 8-13% if suppliers keep their capacity utilization rates below 100% (i.e., they are still not operating at fully loaded capacity). In the DRAM market, the rising DDR5 and HBM penetration rates will further push up the overall ASP, thereby widening the QoQ increase in contract prices.

Finally, in 4Q24, the general price rally is anticipated to continue if suppliers maintain an effective strategy for controlling output. DRAM contract prices are forecasted to increase by about 8-13% QoQ. It should be noted that the increase in DRAM contract prices will be primarily due to the rising market penetration of DDR5 and HBM products. However, looking at individual products or product types, such as DDR5, QoQ declines are a possibility. This means that the general rally of DRAM contract prices during 2024 reflects changes in the product mix rather than an across-the-board rise for all types of DRAM chips. As for NAND Flash products, their contract prices are forecasted to increase by 0-5% QoQ for 4Q24.
Source: TrendForce
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33 Comments on Higher DRAM and NAND Prices this Year, if Suppliers can Control Output

#26
Wirko
colossusrageblackIf you're in the computer hardware manufacturing business and you see your prices falling do the following:

Step 1, get some industry "insider" or financial company to say that they are forecasting higher prices in your product.
Step 2, get tech websites and youtubers to talk about what the "insider" said to cause panic in consumers
Step 3, consumers start buying more of your products
Step 4, raise your prices throughout the year even though nothing really changed.
Step 5, once your sales start to dry up, start lowering prices again to get consumers to buy
Step 6, repeat.
That's fine because if you're Jane Consumer, yo do the following:
At Step 3, you buy some products called MU and WDC at a little known tech store called, I think, "Nasdaq"
At Step 5, you sell what you bought at Step 3 and buy a few real SSDs that you need, and then a few more because they are cheap.
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#27
trsttte
Prima.VeraFunny how drug Cartels are illegal, but Oil and Semiconductors ones are perfectly fine, and even government sponsored.
This is no different, sadly.
Prima.VeraI meant about the "Cartel" notion, not the type of it necessarily...
The word cartel has quite a different meaning between those two contexts though. Drug cartels often still involve groups colluding and price fixing but the term is used to describe gang factions selling an illegal products who "compete" (aka wage wars on the streets) between each other to dominate the market unlike regular business cartels. It's still funny that the term is most recognized and more often used to describe kind of the wrong thing than it's actual meaning though.
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#28
sam_86314
And this is why I decided against returning my 4TB MP34. All decent 4TB drives are now like $250.

If only price fixing was illegal...

Yes, I know that it is illegal in the US, but the FTC is an absolute joke when it comes to enforcing anything
Posted on Reply
#29
Icon Charlie
Legacy-ZAI am so glad more people have started to notice.

They just dress their strongarming with nice-sounding words and then their mindless drones buy their products, magically thinking that it's something else. "Muh inflation"

Just keep boycotting where you can and don't become a <<< consumer >>>
Agreed. This is nothing but market speak by talking heads.
Posted on Reply
#30
Wirko
Legacy-ZAand don't become a <<< consumer >>>
How would you describe the stereotypical "\\\ consumer ///"?

The guy buying stuff when he needs it, regardless of price

or

The guy buying stuff because it's cheap?
Posted on Reply
#31
chrcoluk
Incoming price fixing fines then.

Same players that were guilty on DDR4.
Posted on Reply
#32
onemanhitsquad
I can tell that a lot of posters have never run a business , created a business , or gotten business degrees , and yet are modern day Milton Friedmans...quite comical
Posted on Reply
#33
GunShot
I just love how CONSUMERS respond to these, CLEARLY, fear-mongering tactics from all of these sick companies; just so (predictably) CONSUMERS could go and run out and buy UNNECESSARY stuff (remember all the toilet tissues were sold off the shelves doing the shutdown... :roll:) and then gloat later... "I'm so glad that I/we purchased ours before... woot-woot" happened." Just... stop it!

The fact is, 4Q23 was the worst year in consumer's purchases, IN ALL SEGMENTS, in over 15-years! FIFTEEN+, folks!

These companies had played you due to their extremely poor sales. And... you deserved to be played! :shadedshu:
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