:: Spot was weak but a surge
is foreseeable
Eventually the back-to-school buying season doesn't
disappoint the marketers. After a quiet month, the emerging demand from end
users finally appears. However, the majority of the demand goes to PC OEM rather
than the clone market. As we mentioned earlier last week, given the characteristics
of lower price, high spec, flexible accessibility and reliable warranty, it
gives end users sufficient incentives to switch to the branded PCs, which has
indirectly squeezed the size of spot market (see figure I). Nevertheless, we
still believe the spot price is likely to rebound and 2H September or 1H October
are probably the last chance to see a price surge since the price premium between
DDR 256Mb spot and contract is increasing, which is attractive for arbitrage
(see figure II).

Figure I-DDR Contract vs. Spot in 2003

Figure II-DDR 256Mb Contract vs. Spot Price
:: Will the budget constraint
eliminate a rally in the contract market?
Currently the contract price for DDR 256Mb stands
at USD42.5~USD45. In other words, the present DRAM contract price level has
hit the historical high in terms of memory content per box for mainstream PCs.
Normally, 10% of system cost in DRAM is the upper bound for PC OEMs. Taken the
budget and current DRAM sufficiency into consideration, we expect the contract
price for the second half of Septmber is likely to remain flat or a slight up.