DXI dropped
2.3 % (or 65 points) to 2,750 during November 8-15, mainly driven
by the price drop of the mainstream chips.
Spot price for DDR 256Mb 32Mx8 400MHz dropped by 3.8% from
US$2.34 to US$2.25 while the same-density efficiently tested
ETT (UTT) chip dropped below US$2.0 and drifted to the US$1.94-
$1.96 range during November 8-15. DDR2 transactions remained
lackluster with prices of the major brands dropped by 1.8%
from US$4.44 to US$4.36. N.M.B (Non-major-brand) had also
dropped 1.5% from US$3.28 to US$3.23. Prices for low-density
SDRAMs still kept staying at the low range with SDRAM 1Mx16
traded within the narrow range of US$0.62-$0.63 and SDRAM
4Mx16 near US$0.96-US$0.98.
As DRAM prices continue trending downward, some major DRAM
buyers and module houses are suffering loss amid the DRAM
inventory kept on hand. They are prompted to source DRAM chips
only upon requests. Some brokers and traders have dumped their
DRAM stocks to the market as they lost patience to wait for the
prices rebound.
DRAMeXchange observes that some DRAM chips, which were marked
with the May to June date codes, were circulated at the spot
market; indicating that these DRAM brokers and traders have
reserved DRAM chips for speculation for months. Sources indicated
that the latest ETT (UTT) prices released slide to US$2.0
and the available quantities should ramp up in coming days,
thus exposing DRAM prices to suffer price pressure through
December.
Despite the top four Taiwan motherboard makers have reported
an approximate of 9.4%MoM shipment growth in October and the
amount should escalate further and peak in November, both
DRAM contract and spot prices have suffered prices down in
the previous months amid the supply glut that ever emerge
from September. The shaky pricings could have evident at Taiwan
DRAM makers' October financial performances. Despite Nanya
and Powerchip respectively reported revenues up 3.8% and 14%,
DRAM ASP drop by at least 5% in October.
The steady demand and limited supply at the spot market hold
spot prices for most NAND Flash chips grow except the 8Gb
part. Prices of the 8Gb chips were traded down from US$55.54
to US$54.68 over the week November 8-15. 1Gb/2Gb/4Gb were
traded slightly up from US$28.52 to US$28.88, US$14.39 to
US$15.1 and US$8.07 to US$8.18 respectively.
We observe that transactions remained limited, especially
for the 4Gb and 8Gb chips. Demand for the Hynix-made 2Gb chip
grew vibrant, buoyed by the demand from China market. However,
sources indicated that Hynix will release more chips to the
spot market this week and some players have start dumping
stocks with a lowering prices.