Prices
coming down sharply as month end selling pressure increases
Month
end dumping begins.
Although we are not
at month-end yet, the selling pressures from DRAM makers have already began
- the price war has recently been launched. We have already seen a large amount
of original chips from DRAM makers out into the open market with negotiable
prices. More aggressive competition may also occur in the OEM brand or white-box
chips due to the excess wafers and no mark chips that have been selling at low
prices in the market before month end.
Spot
prices
There is little to
suggest that DDR prices will not trend down sharply due to dumping out of inventory
prior to Chinese New Year. After Chinese New Year, DRAM makers don't predict
any major pick up in volume (replenishing orders from major PC OEM customers),
therefore they have no good reason to hold or build inventory for the traditional
slow 1Q demand.
From the demand side,
both the PC OEMs and module makers are expecting a decline in DRAM ASPs during
the seasonally slower first half of the year. Inventory management is one of
the key factors in controlling costs during this sluggish demand period, therefore
they just try to keep the lowest inventory level for production needs.
For the middlemen
- traders are most likely just trading for the short-term (they have a no inventory
policy). However, official distributors are sometimes forced to take more than
what they need - they also face the inventory management issues of selling-through
with lower prices at month end.
This week, we expect
DDR prices to drop sharper than they have been - there are always better competitive
prices coming out for any inquiry.
SDRAM prices are
also facing the downward pressure, but not for the same reasons as with the
oversupply of DDR. The main reason for SDRAM pricing pressure is that traders
want to cash the SDRAM in before Chinese New Year. It's just a short-term phenomenon
and we don't expect SDRAM prices to drop as sharply as DDR.
DDR
contract prices continue trend down, and SDRAM prices are relative stable to
up a little bit.
DDR-
256MB DDR contract
prices have settled down around the $45 ~ $48 range; down from the $51~$54 of
1H of Jan.
256Mb DDR chip prices are quoted at $5.5~ $6 down from $6~$6.5.
128MB DDR are around $25~$27 down from $25~$28. 128MB isn't down as much as
256MB; because there are not much 128MB DDR modules. The main stream in DDR
is 256MB, not 128MB.
128Mb DDR chips are quoted at around $2.75~$3.00 down from $2.85~$3.35. 128Mb
DDR chip prices are almost the same as SDRAM 128Mb chip prices.
SDRAM-
256MB SDRAM module
contract prices are selling at $33~$40 up from $30~36.
256Mb SDRAM chip prices are quoted at $4~$5 up from $3.25~$4.25.
128MB DDR module
contract prices are selling at $18 ~ $25 up from $17~$22.
128Mb DDR chips are still quoted at around $2.50~$3.00.