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#BernsteinSaysMemoryBullMarketToLastUntil2027
We are moving away from the chaotic, sudden price spikes triggered by the panic following supply shortages; instead, we are entering a period of structurally sound, AI-driven expansion expected to last until 2027.
The dynamics driving this cycle explain why the market has remained resilient despite slowing consumer demand.
Q2 2026 Price Increases and Q3 Slowdown: The second quarter of 2026 was tremendous for memory manufacturers; however, the slowdown in the third quarter signals that consumers are reaching the limits of their purchasing power.
Traditional DRAM: Average increase of 74%; growth is expected to moderate to the 13%–18% range.
Server DRAM: +60% to +67%; bolstered by high-performance DDR5 modules; spot prices are trading at significant premiums compared to contract prices.
Mobile DRAM: ~80%; experienced a sharp peak, but smartphone manufacturers (OEMs) are now adjusting procurement schedules and scaling back configurations due to costs.
NAND Flash: ~60% (overall contract); significant divergences are evident. Wafer spot prices fell 3%–4% in June, yet the enterprise SSD and mobile storage segments (+70% to +80%) sustained the market.
AI-Driven Structural Shift: Why Is This Time Different? Historically, memory cycles have been characterized by "boom-and-bust" patterns: suppliers build up excess capacity, consumer demand for PCs and smartphones drops, and prices hit rock bottom.
This cycle is being fundamentally reshaped by two key forces:
Long-Term Agreements (LTAs): Hyperscale data center operators and Tier-1 US Cloud Service Providers (CSPs) are no longer relying solely on purchases from the open spot market. They are signing 3-to-5-year contracts that include strict price floors to protect against downturns. For instance, while suppliers like SK Hynix and Micron signed major LTAs early in the year to secure product allocations, Samsung adopted an aggressive stance aimed at achieving higher price ceilings.
Capacity Shifting (Cannibalization): Insatiable demand for High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) and advanced server DDR5 means manufacturers are shifting physical wafer capacity away from traditional PC and mobile DRAM production toward these sectors. Even as demand for consumer electronics weakens, overall supply remains constrained because production facilities (fabs) are focused on manufacturing high-margin AI chips.
Supplier Outlook
Bernstein’s view highlights the winners of this highly diversified, AI-centric production strategy:
Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron (Outperform): These three companies are the primary beneficiaries of the HBM and DDR5 boom; they possess substantial, secured backlogs of Long-Term Agreement (LTA) orders that smooth out their revenue trajectories through 2027.
SanDisk (Outperform): Highly advantaged due to its exceptionally strong structural positioning in enterprise SSD contracts, offering a high price floor (~$0.29/GB) that shields it from minor fluctuations in NAND wafer prices.
Kioxia (Cautious/Underperform): Exposed to more volatile, non-LTA commodity flash markets and less insulated from the softening consumer wafer segment.
The "rocket ship" phase of monthly price surges is ending, but do not mistake this for the end of the bull market. The structural baseline for memory pricing remains at a high level. Normalization is not expected to fully take hold until late 2027 or 2028, as newly constructed production capacity finally comes online.
We are moving away from the chaotic, sudden price spikes triggered by the panic following supply shortages; instead, we are entering a period of structurally sound, AI-driven expansion expected to last until 2027.
The dynamics driving this cycle explain why the market has remained resilient despite slowing consumer demand.
Q2 2026 Price Increases and Q3 Slowdown: The second quarter of 2026 was tremendous for memory manufacturers; however, the slowdown in the third quarter signals that consumers are reaching the limits of their purchasing power.
Traditional DRAM: Average increase of 74%; growth is expected to moderate to the 13%–18% range.
Server DRAM: +60% to +67%; bolstered by high-performance DDR5 modules; spot prices are trading at significant premiums compared to contract prices.
Mobile DRAM: ~80%; experienced a sharp peak, but smartphone manufacturers (OEMs) are now adjusting procurement schedules and scaling back configurations due to costs.
NAND Flash: ~60% (overall contract); significant divergences are evident. Wafer spot prices fell 3%–4% in June, yet the enterprise SSD and mobile storage segments (+70% to +80%) sustained the market.
AI-Driven Structural Shift: Why Is This Time Different? Historically, memory cycles have been characterized by "boom-and-bust" patterns: suppliers build up excess capacity, consumer demand for PCs and smartphones drops, and prices hit rock bottom.
This cycle is being fundamentally reshaped by two key forces:
Long-Term Agreements (LTAs): Hyperscale data center operators and Tier-1 US Cloud Service Providers (CSPs) are no longer relying solely on purchases from the open spot market. They are signing 3-to-5-year contracts that include strict price floors to protect against downturns. For instance, while suppliers like SK Hynix and Micron signed major LTAs early in the year to secure product allocations, Samsung adopted an aggressive stance aimed at achieving higher price ceilings.
Capacity Shifting (Cannibalization): Insatiable demand for High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) and advanced server DDR5 means manufacturers are shifting physical wafer capacity away from traditional PC and mobile DRAM production toward these sectors. Even as demand for consumer electronics weakens, overall supply remains constrained because production facilities (fabs) are focused on manufacturing high-margin AI chips.
Supplier Outlook
Bernstein’s view highlights the winners of this highly diversified, AI-centric production strategy:
Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron (Outperform): These three companies are the primary beneficiaries of the HBM and DDR5 boom; they possess substantial, secured backlogs of Long-Term Agreement (LTA) orders that smooth out their revenue trajectories through 2027.
SanDisk (Outperform): Highly advantaged due to its exceptionally strong structural positioning in enterprise SSD contracts, offering a high price floor (~$0.29/GB) that shields it from minor fluctuations in NAND wafer prices.
Kioxia (Cautious/Underperform): Exposed to more volatile, non-LTA commodity flash markets and less insulated from the softening consumer wafer segment.
The "rocket ship" phase of monthly price surges is ending, but do not mistake this for the end of the bull market. The structural baseline for memory pricing remains at a high level. Normalization is not expected to fully take hold until late 2027 or 2028, as newly constructed production capacity finally comes online.