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DRAM/NAND Prices Short Term Affected by Japan-South Korea Trade Tension and Toshiba Outage – DRAMeXchange

Long term effects depend on inventory levels.

DRAMeXchange, a division of TrendForce Corp., points out that after the Toshiba outage in mid-June, the Japanese government announced that it will be controlling South Korea-bound exports of three key materials used in the manufacturing of semiconductors, smartphones and panels, causing module manufacturers in the memory industry downstream to give higher quotes.

However, since DRAM and NAND flash inventories remain high, and that this is not a complete barring of materials but a prolonging of procedures, the possibility of a short-term, structural reversal of supply and demand is low.

The Japan-South Korea trade tensions raised news about a reversal in memory prices within the industry.

This analysis gives that the inventories of module manufacturers downstream are generally lower since DRAM prices have already been sliding fast for 3 consecutive quarters, and we therefore do see some module manufacturers raising their quotes or announcing halts to production in light of the material restrictions to signal a rebound.

However, spot markets currently make up just less than 10% of the entire DRAM market; the supply-demand trend in the mid- and long-term remains dependent on contract markets, which make up over 90%.

Looking at demand, analysts see that whether PCs and smartphones at the retail end or the implementation of enterprise servers and datacenters, overall end demand still seems to be rather weak.

Yet looking back at supply, DRAM suppliers are generally sitting at over 3 months’ worth of inventories, leading to a continual sliding of contract prices for PC, server and mobile DRAMs at the beginning of 3Q with no signs of reversal as of yet.

The report thinks the possibility of a structural reversal of supply and demand in the DRAM market to be slim.

The NAND flash market, on the other hand, is affected by Japan’s increasingly stringent controls on materials exports and the Toshiba outage.

Since wafer quotes are already a bit low, July is forecast to see rising quotes beginning from July. But considering the fact that suppliers generally have two to 3 months’ worth of inventories in their possession, most module manufacturers won’t be raising prices immediately from the get-go.

Whether transaction prices will rise in the future still depends on the market and inventories on the supply side.

As for quotes by OEMs for various SSD and eMMC/UFS products, although some suppliers have temporarily ceased shipments, the report, judging from supply and demand and taking the inventories of OEMs into consideration, thinks that prices will come under downward pressure in the long term despite the short term increase in NAND flash prices.

Read also:
Toshiba Memory Experienced 13-Minute Power Outage on June 15 on Main NAND Flash Production Base in Yokkaichi, Japan – DRAMeXchange
All production facilities within the base (Fab 2, Fab 3, Fab 4, Fab 5, and Fab 6) affected
July 1, 2019 | Press Release
Bounce in NAND Flash Prices Remains Unlikely in 3Q19 – DRAMeXchange
Demand for smartphones and servers going below expected levels in 2019 as US-China trade dispute heats up.
June 25, 2019 | Press Release
1Q19 Revenue for NAND Flash Brands Fall by 24% From 4Q18 – DRAMeXchange
Samsung -25%, SK Hynix -35.5%, Toshiba -20%, WD -26%, Micron -18.5%, Intel -17%
June 5, 2019 | Press Release
Drop of 20% in 2Q19 NAND Flash Contract Prices – DRAMeXchange
Most dramatic drop since NAND flash supply surpassed demand back in early 2018
March 28, 2019 | Press Release

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