The pandemic caused severe business disruptions globally, which in turn killed a lot of jobs. With many industries not expected to pick up in the next couple of years, demand for such products will decline when people become more prudent about spending. To be honest, I feel the demand for RAM and NAND are on a steady decline for years now. There may be cases where the prices goes up for awhile, but generally its been on a downward trend. All the manufacturers have invested loads of money expanding when mobile devices are selling like hot cakes. But fast forward to now, demand for mobile devices are declining year on year because of the ever increasing prices and incremental upgrades. There is no longer the wow factor to urge people to continuously upgrade nowadays. Therefore I don't think memory and NAND prices are able to find a solid foothold or continue to climb. While manufacturers can reduce supply, but any spare capacity will still incur losses.
Yeah, sorry, but you don't have a clue what you're talking about if that's what you believe.
NAND flash demand has been going up, up and up and was meant to increase a lot in terms of price this year.
If you're thinking PCs and laptops, you're not looking in the right places.
One of the major reasons NAND flash demand was going to increase this year was because Japan is switching to a new generation pachinko machines that are using NAND flash instead of NOR flash. See
https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/biz/archives/2020/07/09/2003739596
A lot of servers are continuing to move to SSD based storage as well.
Both of the new consoles launching this year are SSD based and have more RAM than previous generations, so this is also a source that has been eating up a lot of the available stock. Admittedly the "RAM" in this case i GDDR, not typical DRAM, but it still affects the market, as it might lead to higher costs when it comes to graphics cards.
Then we have mobile phones, which are getting larger and faster internal storage (UFS is technically an SSD on a chip) and more RAM. In fact, mobile phones were one of the main reasons that there was a shortage of certain types of memory for the past couple of years. Demand might be down somewhat, but 6GB is the new 4GB when it comes to RAM and most phones have 128GB of storage, rather than 64GB. Higher-end phones has even more so...
It was expected that demand and prices were going to go up this year, not down.
I suggest you read some industry information before making random guesses based on your own opinions, as they don't matter, facts do on the other hand.