Memory Giants Are Jacking Up DRAM Prices, Not Boosting Supply

Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron earnings reveal a price-over-volume strategy that's squeezing non-AI customers.

Memory Giants Are Jacking Up DRAM Prices, Not Boosting Supply

The big three memory chipmakers — Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron — are all posting stronger earnings, but the gains are coming from higher DRAM prices rather than increased shipments. That's a deliberate choice, and it tells you everything about where the industry's priorities lie.

Instead of ramping production to meet broad demand, the trio is optimizing for revenue. Translation: they're charging more per chip rather than making more chips available.

The AI sector stands to benefit eventually as supply catches up to its massive appetite for high-bandwidth memory. But the rest of the market — consumer electronics, PCs, servers outside the AI bubble — faces a prolonged squeeze.

Clients who aren't building AI infrastructure can expect tight supply and inflated prices to persist for years. The memory cartel is feeding the AI boom first. Everyone else gets the scraps.