DRAMeXchange says DRAM prices will drop lower than previously expected

Posted on Thursday, June 06 2019 @ 14:06 CEST by Thomas De Maesschalck
DRAMeXchange has updated its price projections for the DRAM market. The analyst outfit says that due to the US-China trade war, prices of DRAM are now expected to fall a lot harder than previously expected.

For Q3 2019, DRAMeXchange predicts a 10-15 percent drop in pricing, about 5 percent more than the previous forecast. For the final quarter of this year, DRAMeXchange anticipates a 10 percent drop, far higher than the previous forecast of 2-5 percent.
DRAMeXchange , a division of TrendForce , points out that, as ripples from the US ban continue to spread, Huawei's shipments of smartphone and server products are feared to face heavy obstacles for the next two to three quarters , impacting peak-season-demand for DRAM products 2H and the time of price precipitation. TrendForce officially adjusts its outlook for 3Q DRAM prices from its original prediction of a 10% decline to a widened 10-15%.

TrendForce points out that the chance of DRAM prices dropping below suppliers' fully-loaded costs was originally predicted to be extremely slim under the premises that the competition only consisted of three giants, and that DRAM production processes were nearing physical limits. Yet a heated US -China trade war may send demand in the second half of this year into quick-freeze, with the increasingly looming uncertainty compelling datacenters to make reductions to capex. Fragile DRAM suppliers may have to admit current inventory casualties on the books by the end of this year, and officially modify their financial statements to report: “Loss.”

According to TrendForce's forecast, DRAM prices have a chance to see a rebound in 2020 due to prices hitting bottom, limited supply bit growth and other factors. But for 2019, it is feared that suppliers will come under prolonged pressure to adjust prices downwards.
DRAMeXchange Q3 Q4 2019 bigger than expected DRAM price drop


About the Author

Thomas De Maesschalck

Thomas has been messing with computer since early childhood and firmly believes the Internet is the best thing since sliced bread. Enjoys playing with new tech, is fascinated by science, and passionate about financial markets. When not behind a computer, he can be found with running shoes on or lifting heavy weights in the weight room.



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