Memory makers see record profits from ai-driven ram price hikes

Major memory manufacturers like Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron are reporting record profits due to surging demand for RAM fueled by the AI industry. Prices for consumer RAM have more than quadrupled in recent months, with analysts predicting further increases in 2026. This boom stems from competition for limited supplies and shifts in production toward AI-specific memory types.

The AI boom has propelled memory prices to new heights, benefiting producers while challenging PC builders and consumers. A 32GB kit of DDR5-6000 RAM, which cost $80 in August 2025, now sells for $340, according to market observations. Analysts forecast even steeper rises, with DDR prices potentially increasing by 60 percent in the first quarter of 2026 alone, driven by server demand.

Samsung Electronics anticipates operating profits of 19.9 to 20.1 trillion Korean won (about $13.8 billion USD) for Q4 2025, a sharp rise from 6.49 trillion won in Q4 2024. The company's memory division, which fluctuates with market cycles, had suffered losses in 2023 due to oversupply but is now thriving.

SK Hynix reported its highest-ever quarterly performance in Q3 2025, with 11.38 trillion Korean won ($7.8 billion) in operating profit, up from 7.03 trillion won the previous year. Its operating margin climbed to 47 percent from 40 percent, attributed to expanding investments in AI infrastructure and surging demand for AI servers.

Micron saw net income jump to $5.24 billion in Q1 2026 from $1.87 billion in Q1 2025, generating the company's highest-ever free cash flow. CEO Sanjay Mehrotra stated, “Total company revenue, DRAM and NAND revenue, as well as HBM and data center revenue and revenue in each of our business units, also reached new records [in fiscal Q1].”

The price surge results from dual pressures: massive AI demand competing with consumer needs—OpenAI's Stargate project alone could consume 40 percent of global DRAM output—and production shifts to high-bandwidth memory (HBM) for Nvidia GPUs, which requires three times the silicon wafer space of standard DDR5. Bank of America analysts predict a 33 percent rise in DRAM average selling prices for 2026, with the HBM market potentially surpassing the entire 2024 RAM market by 2028. Mehrotra expects demand and supply constraints to continue beyond 2026, though a potential AI bubble burst could lead to oversupply and price drops, as seen in 2023.

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Shocked customers at a PC store gaze at tripled RAM and SSD prices amid AI shortage, with server imagery in background.
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Ram and memory prices surge due to ai shortage

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A shortage of ram and flash memory chips, driven by the ai boom, has caused prices to triple in just three months, making it a poor time to build or upgrade pcs. While gpu prices have stabilized, the rising costs affect ssds and both ddr4 and ddr5 kits, with higher-capacity options hit hardest. Manufacturers like lenovo are stockpiling components to mitigate impacts.

High-capacity DRAM prices are surging as demand from AI servers strains supply for personal computers. Average selling prices per gigabit rose sharply in late 2025. This trend is expected to push costs almost double by March 2026.

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The International Data Corporation (IDC) has warned of a potential downturn in the PC market, predicting shipments could drop by 8.9 percent in 2026 due to escalating memory prices driven by AI demands. Memory manufacturers are prioritizing AI data center components over consumer electronics, pushing up costs for PCs and smartphones alike. Companies like Framework have already raised prices, with further increases likely.

Japanese memory maker Kioxia has announced that its manufacturing capacity is fully booked until the end of 2026, due to surging demand from AI investments. This shortage is expected to keep SSD prices high for both enterprise and consumer markets. Executives warn that companies cannot afford to halt AI spending amid competitive pressures.

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Samsung Electronics estimated its fourth-quarter operating profit at 20 trillion won, a 208 percent surge from a year earlier, driven by soaring memory chip prices amid high AI demand. Sales are projected at 93 trillion won, marking a quarterly record. The figures exceed analyst expectations and highlight a chip market supercycle.

Custom PC builder Maingear has introduced a BYO RAM program to address the ongoing computer memory shortage. Customers can supply their own DDR5 RAM, which Maingear will install and test in built-to-order systems. The initiative comes as data center demands strain global RAM supplies.

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Amid ongoing global trade uncertainties, South Korea plans to counter economic challenges in 2026 by capitalizing on the artificial intelligence boom and its semiconductor sector. Experts highlight robust exports and a U.S. tariff deal as growth drivers, while pointing to Chinese competition and weak domestic demand as key risks.

 

 

 

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