Pessimistic
outlook for both SDRAM and DDR price this week.
::
Supply increased in January over 8% MoM.
Output for January
increased 8% MoM to reach over 200 million units (256Mb equivalent). We expect
output to continue increasing in the coming months from a combination of improving
yield rates and new capacity (output) from 300m fabs (Infineon, ProMOS and Powerchip).
This trend looks like it will continue for the first half of this year - without
a suprise pick-up in demand, and with no signs for production cutbacks yet seen...
Every individual company is aggressively working on improving yield rates to
lower production costs. In short- it's oversupply - Prices are looking downward.
::
Demand is muted.
Even though the China
market is back to normal working days, there are no demand refilling orders.
Even worse, vendors there are beginning to get rid of their inventory - therefore,
prices are plumeting down. Original Module prices for DDR 256MB are just slightly
above $30 in the channel and OEM Module prices are already trading below $30.
DRAM makers are not trying to maintain prices anymore. Prices are trading down
day by day in the market. Marketers have very little to be optimistic about
(supply increasing, demand sluggish, war impact), and no one wants to keep inventory
in-house. Module inventories in the US are relative higher than other areas;
there is more downward pressure from there.
::
Consumer Graphic DRAM prices relative stable.
For mainstream commodity
DRAM, prices are trading down. However, the consumer graphic DRAM prices are
relative stable as demand for consumer products are performing better than PCs.
However, within the graphic DRAM market, we have observed more and more companies
joining this market to get a piece of the pie. Price competition is heating
up margins are shrinking as well. Almost all DRAM IDM companies extend their
product lines to produce graphic DRAMs.
::
DDR contract prices drop sharply. SDRAM contract prices are relative stable
but volume shrink down.
DDR-
- 256MB DDR contract
prices have settled down around the $38 ~ $42 range.
- 256Mb DDR chip
prices are quoted at $4.25~ $4.85.
- 128MB DDR prices
are approximately $18~$22.
- 128Mb DDR chips
are quoted at around $2.20~$2.70.
- Volumes for 1H
of Feb. are also trending down since OEM companies still carry some inventory
from Jan. There is no rush for them to purchase higher prices right now -
expecting 2H, contract price for 256MB DDR will be below $35.
SDRAM- Keeps
stable
- 256MB SDRAM module
contract prices are selling at $37~$40.
- 256Mb SDRAM chip
prices are quoted at $4.2~$5.
- 128MB SDRAM module
contract prices are selling at $18 ~ $25.
- 128Mb SDRAM chips
are still quoted at around $2.50~$3.00.
- SDRAM contract
volumes have decreased significantly already. Except for some server and workstations,
there are few models using SDRAM and it will not be an indicator anymore.
Therefore we plan to stop quoting SDRAM contract prices from 2Q of this year.