Monday, July 4th 2022

Suppliers More Willing to Acquiesce on Price, 3Q22 DRAM Pricing Decline Expands to Nearly 10%, Says TrendForce

According to the latest TrendForce research, despite the rapid weakening of overall consumer demand in 1H22, DRAM manufacturers previously presented a tough stance on price negotiations and gave little ground, steadily conveying inventory pressure from buyers to sellers. Facing uncertain peak-season demand in 2H22, some DRAM suppliers have begun effectively expressing clear intentions to cut prices, especially in the server field, where demand is relatively stable, in order to reduce inventory pressure. This situation will cause 3Q22 DRAM pricing to drop from the previous 3~8% to nearly 10% QoQ. If a price war is incited due to companies competing for sales, the drop in prices may exceed 10%.

PC OEMs have continuously downgraded their shipment prospects. With average DRAM inventory levels at more than two months, unless a huge price incentive exists, there is no urgent demand for procurement. At the same time, thanks to continuous adoption of the advanced 1Z/1alpha process, supply continued to increase in 3Q22. DDR4 output could not be effectively reduced due to high pricing limiting the penetration rate of DDR5. The price decline of PC DRAM in 3Q22 is revised to 5~10%.
At present, server DRAM inventory clients have on hand is approximately 7 to 8 weeks and the buyers' consensus is that the price of DRAM will continue to fall due to increased inventory pressure on sellers. If manufacturers are willing to provide attractive quotations, buyers are willing to discuss the possibility of volume commitments. As advanced manufacturing processes progress dynamically and terminal consumer products continue to weaken, server DRAM has become the only effective sales outlet. Therefore, Korean manufacturers were the first to signal a willingness to discuss a quarterly pricing reduction of more than 5%, which expanded the decline of server DRAM to 5~10% in 3Q22.

Smartphone production targets continued to be downgraded due to the sluggish economy. In addition, smartphone brands are also pessimistic regarding future prospects, casting a gloom over their attitude towards materials stocking. However, the output of mobile DRAM still increased in 3Q22 due to the adoption of advanced processes among several manufacturers, increasing pressure on suppliers. This increases the willingness of sellers to offer price concessions. Given the polarized disparity between supply and demand, the pricing decline of mobile DRAM is forecast to expand to 8-13% this quarter.

Demand for graphics DRAM procurement has weakened due to inflation-related reduction in consumer products demand and a faltering cryptocurrency market. At the same time, migrating graphics DRAM production capacity to other types of DRAM products in not as easy as migrating standard DRAM (Commodity DRAM) capacity. Although demand has weakened, it is difficult for suppliers to quickly adjust output. Therefore, they are also facing increasing inventory pressure. Graphics DRAM pricing in 3Q22 is revised to decline 3-8% QoQ.

TV shipments lead the fall and demand related to networking and industrial applications have also shown signs of weakening. The price of DDR3 is currently at a relatively high point and there is plenty of room for pricing to fall in the future. Weak stocking momentum originating from DDR4-related applications does not rule out the possibility of a wider decline. In addition to the expansion of output due to the introduction of advanced processes, Chinese and Taiwanese manufacturers will still add new production capacity in 2H22. The decline in consumer DRAM pricing is forecast to deepen to 8~13% this quarter.
Source: TrendForce
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11 Comments on Suppliers More Willing to Acquiesce on Price, 3Q22 DRAM Pricing Decline Expands to Nearly 10%, Says TrendForce

#1
ModEl4
Right now in Geizhals, DDR5 is +60% more expensive than DDR4-3600 for a 16GB kit (DDR5-4800) and more than double for DDR5-5600.

TeamGroup T-Force Vulcan 16GB kit DDR4-3600 CL18-22-22 (58€)
Crucial16GBb kit DDR5-4800 CL40-39-39 (93€)
Kingston FURY Beast 16GB kit DDR5-5600 CL40-40-40. (119€)

Maybe by end of next Q it will be closer to around 1.5X & 1.8X making the difference for a 16GB kit (4800/3600) at 30€ or less.
That's good, it used to be around double than that before one Q, around 60€ or bit more.
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#2
Denver
It's good for my health to read the keywords "GPU" and "prices falling". Thank you. :)
Posted on Reply
#3
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
Be nice if gpu prices were that of 2019 $500 (top end)
Posted on Reply
#4
P4-630
eidairaman1Be nice if gpu prices were that of 2019 $500 (top end)
That's nice wishing...
Posted on Reply
#5
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
P4-630That's nice wishing...
Yup, certain AIB RX 5700XT was right around where my R9 290 VaporX was in price.
Posted on Reply
#6
DeathtoGnomes
TheLostSwedeadoption of the advanced 1Z/1alpha process
Is this new? what exactly is this process?
Posted on Reply
#7
Garrus
Still waiting for the 32GB for $100 price from 10 years ago. 10 years without reaching that price again.
Posted on Reply
#8
Wirko
DeathtoGnomesIs this new? what exactly is this process?
These are just fantasy numbers in nanometers. The manufacturing process for DRAM is so much different from everything else (logic, static RAM) that the manufacturers don't want to throw around numbers like 16, 14, 12, 10. (But sometimes they do.) So, 1x is "eighteen or so", 1y is even less, 1z is still less, and 1α (1alpha) is already dangerously close to 10 but there must be some space left for 1β.
www.techinsights.com/blog/memory/micron-1a-dram-technology
Posted on Reply
#9
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
GarrusStill waiting for the 32GB for $100 price from 10 years ago. 10 years without reaching that price again.
Especially for PC 28800 DDR 4
Posted on Reply
#10
TheLostSwede
News Editor
ModEl4Right now in Geizhals, DDR5 is +60% more expensive than DDR4-3600 for a 16GB kit (DDR5-4800) and more than double for DDR5-5600.

TeamGroup T-Force Vulcan 16GB kit DDR4-3600 CL18-22-22 (58€)
Crucial16GBb kit DDR5-4800 CL40-39-39 (93€)
Kingston FURY Beast 16GB kit DDR5-5600 CL40-40-40. (119€)

Maybe by end of next Q it will be closer to around 1.5X & 1.8X making the difference for a 16GB kit (4800/3600) at 30€ or less.
That's good, it used to be around double than that before one Q, around 60€ or bit more.
32 GB kits are "closer" in price, but still a significant gap on Geizhals.
Posted on Reply
#11
ModEl4
TheLostSwede32 GB kits are "closer" in price, but still a significant gap on Geizhals.
Yes for DDR5-4800, still DDR4-3600 vs DDR5-5600 (the official DDR5 speed of upcoming Raptor Lake and Zen4 according to leaks) is now nearly double just like 16GB kits.
Usually for people that need 32GB DDR5, the rest component choices lead to a price level that isn't exactly mainstream, so in many cases we are talking about enthusiasts or professionals.
Also what interest me as a concept is gaming grade APUs (AMD has no competition for now for desktop) , when mobile 6000 series launched, i said that 6700G+DDR5 platform will offer very weak competition regarding performance/price vs a 13400F+ARC+DDR4 platform in Q4 (despite what leakers say for me the most probable scenario is that Zen4/Zen4 platform won't be September on shelves (possibly September will just be announced) it should be early Q4 (first week of October at the earliest) the DDR5 decline softens a little bit the difference but still not enough (AMD to be competitive imo, needs to offer 6000G series at lower prices than 5000G series despite higher production cost and that is a tough choice that probably won't happen)
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