The
Battle of the contract price
DRAM
makers
DRAM makers want
to raise the 2H August contract price (the media reported increases of 5%
to 10% for DDR products). The DRAM makers believe the price should be raised
because:
1. Worldwide DDR
output is still less than expected because of delays in technology migration.
Worldwide DDR output was less than 40% of total output in July. However the
ratio of PC models migrating from SDRAM to DDR was over 80%.
2. Relatively bad
yield rates from micro-process (0.14um and 0.13um) migration is influencing/reducing
the total DRAM output (especially on DDR).
3. We are in the
traditional PC's peak season and therefore expectation of demand increases
still exists.
Overall, DRAM makers
are saying the supply of DDR remains tight and difficult to fully support
the DDR needs of their OEM customers. Several major DDR DRAM makers have more
negotiating power on allocating price and volume - becuase of their size and
product mix.
PC
OEM Companies
PC OEM are reluctant to accept increases in prices:
1) Although 3Q
forecasts for QoQ growth of PC and Motherboard shipments is approximately
10 to 15%, the PC and Motherboard companies still have not received firm orders
for September: End-demand sell through remains a major concern.
2. Recently HPQ
has placed many orders after its restructuring, however, future cancelations
or over/double-booking could be a potential risk in the near future.
3. Worldwide economic
and PC retail selling figures have not given good indications of a positive
Q3 and Q4.
Since the outlooks
from the PC side are very positive, PC makers are trying to lower the total
cost from PC componenents (CPUs, chipsets, motherboards and memory). Memory
prices are not easy to increase.
Spot
price - a tool of negotiating contract prices
Over the last few
days, we experienced volatility in DDR spot prices. At the end of last week,
prices raised up very rapidly so DRAM makers were in a better position to
negotiate up contract prices with help from media reports. On Tuesday, we
were also aware that some PC OEMs were selling some volume of DDR onto the
spot market to restrain spot price increases in defense of rising contract
prices.
Setting
contract prices range from flat to up 5%
Our data surveys
show us the contract price will rise just slightly from some DRAM companies.
The more powerful suppliers like Samsung were better positioned for slightly
less than 5% price increases. Also, newer suppliers like Nanya Tech and Winbond
should also see some price increases. The rest of the big players, Micron,
Hynix and Infineon, couldn't supply enough volume to satisfy customers - therefore
they couldn't easy negotiate price raises because of their lower volumes /
service - most of their contract price will remain flat.
Spot
price trend looks slight up this week.
Over the remainder
of this week, we sense the spot price will be slightly up because of sentiment
of DRAM makers and marketers' expectations. The uptrend range probably will
not be big though. Are marketers worring about risks of possible month end
dumping next week? It's still too soon to tell as spot prices can change within
several minutes.