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QoQ Decline in DRAM ASP Will Moderate to Around 13~18% for 1Q23, but Slump Will Continue, Says TrendForce

AleksandarK

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TrendForce's latest analysis of the DRAM market finds that the inventory pressure on suppliers remain significant due to the persistently weak demand for consumer electronics. Among the top three DRAM suppliers, only Samsung has seen a slight drop in inventory level thanks to its highly competitive pricing strategy. To prevent DRAM prices as a whole from making another sharp dive, a few suppliers such as Micron have been cutting production. Therefore, the QoQ decline in DRAM prices are projected to shrink to around 13~18% for 1Q23. However, the slump will have yet to reach the bottom at that time. Regarding the QoQ changes in the prices of the major categories of DRAM products for 1Q23, PC DRAM and server DRAM are projected to again register a drop that is near 20%. Conversely, mobile DRAM will experience the smallest price decline because its profit margin is ready the thinnest.




In the PC DRAM segment, PC OEMs have lowered procurement quantity for two consecutive quarters as sales of notebook (laptop) computers have been lackluster. Now, moving into 1Q23, PC OEMs hold around 9~13 weeks of PC DRAM inventory. Even though they are working hard to consume the existing stock, the traditional low season acts a powerful constraint. The overall PC DRAM bit output is expected to fall during 1Q23 because Micron has already made a marginal cut to its PC DRAM production, and SK Hynix will soon follow suit. However, supply glut will still be significant in the PC DRAM segment. The top three suppliers have been aggressive in lowering prices for DDR5 products, so the DDR5 penetration rate in the PC DRAM segment is projected to reach almost 20% in 1Q23. Regarding QoQ changes in PC DRAM prices for 1Q23, DDR5 products will experience a drop of around 18~23%, and DDR4 products will experience a drop of around 15~20%. The ASP of PC DRAM products is projected to fall by around 15~20% QoQ for 1Q23.

Turning to the server DRAM segment, server demand is going to fall during 1Q23 because of the effects of the traditional low season, inventory adjustments, and the recent weakening of the global economy. North American cloud service providers have already started to dial down server demand in terms of procurement quantity and the pace of server deployment. However, suppliers continue to raise the share of server DRAM in production, so this segment continues to face mounting inventory pressure. While some suppliers are cutting production, this is not enough to effectively limit the decline in server DRAM prices. Regarding QoQ changes in server DRAM prices for 1Q23, DDR5 products are expected to suffer a decline of 18~23%, which is slightly larger compared with the projected drop experienced by DDR4 products for the same period. However, the DDR5 penetration rate in the server DRAM segment is projected to reach just around 10% in 1Q23. Thus, DDR4 products are going to determine the extent of the general decline. Currently, the ASP of server DRAM products is projected to fall by around 15~20% QoQ for 1Q23.

The mobile DRAM segment has benefited from about six quarters of inventory adjustments on the part of smartphone brands. Currently, smartphone brands hold 5~7 weeks of mobile DRAM inventory on average, so the inventory situation is fairly optimal. On the other hand, smartphone sales have been in a slump. A rebound is not expected in the short term, especially after the latest change in China's policy on controlling COVID-19 outbreaks. With smartphone brands lowering their device sales targets for 2023, there will be a certain degree of difficulty when it comes to inventory consumption in the mobile DRAM segment. However, mobile DRAM quotes are starting to show a more moderate decline than before because suppliers have scaled back production, and the effect of this will become more prominent over time. Moreover, mobile DRAM already has the lowest profit margin compared with other categories of DRAM products. Since the market consensus is that the demand for mobile DRAM products will remain weak, slashing prices further will do little in helping suppliers to capture more market share. Hence, TrendForce projects that the QoQ decline in mobile DRAM prices will narrow to around 10~15% for 1Q23.

With regard to the graphics DRAM segment, shipments are going to ramp up for graphics cards and notebook computers featuring the latest GPUs. However, the overall demand for consumer electronics is sluggish, and the previous period for inventory adjustments was quite long. Therefore, graphics DRAM buyers maintains a cautious procurement strategy. Furthermore, demand growth still lagged behind supply growth in graphics DRAM segment during 4Q22, so inventory continues to pile up for this product category on the supply side. Additionally, for the specifications of the mainstream graphics DRAM solutions, there will be a full-scale shift in buyers' demand from GDDR6 8Gb to GDDR6 16Gb during 2023. With the demand for them becoming more limited, graphics DRAM products based on GDDR6 8Gb will experience more dramatic price fluctuations. TrendForce currently projects that the ASP of graphics DRAM products will fall by about 18~23% QoQ for 1Q23, but the decline could get larger if suppliers continue to undercut each other in this segment.

Lastly, in the consumer DRAM segment, prices have yet to leave the downturn phase as there are no signs of buyers ramping up procurement activities. Also, the flow of consumer DRAM orders related to networking devices was steady before but has now started to gradually decelerate this first quarter. Due to these developments, shipments of consumer DRAM products on the whole are going to slide. Even though Micron began to cut production in November last year, suppliers' DRAM inventories have been climbing to new heights. This segment will continue to experience excess supply unless suppliers undergo several quarters of inventory adjustments and make larger production cuts. TrendForce projects that the ASP of consumer DRAM products will fall by 18~23% QoQ for 1Q23 as supply glut persists in this segment.

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I don't think it's rocket science to predict that when economy is in dire straights and a video card costs as much as a whole PC used to, people aren't going to flock to buying PC components. Be it GPUs, RAM, CPUs, mobos or whatever.
 

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People are avoiding Zen4 because of the high cost of the platform. Lower DDR5 prices address exactly that. I'm not sure where we are wrt to motherboards, though.

Lower DDR5 prices do help but the major issues are in the high-wattage Ryzen itself, the high prices, the high motherboard cost as the most important.
They have to offer cheap motherboards, otherwise the platform will never be accepted.

Actually, going forward, it will become worse if we take into account their desire for new PCIe versions adoption. :kookoo:
 
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We now has decreased prices of Ryzen 7000X CPU's, and cheaper 7000 non X series with sweet cooler include in box. Now tendency for more decrease prices of memory. In combination this activity make price of platform more acceptable.
 
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However, the DDR5 penetration rate in the server DRAM segment is projected to reach just around 10% in 1Q23.
Hmmm, that would mean that Zen 4 Epyc and Sapphire Rapids don't sell and won't sell, and datacenter operators will keep buying energy-inefficient old tech. I find it hard to believe.
 

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Hmmm, that would mean that Zen 4 Epyc and Sapphire Rapids don't sell and won't sell, and datacenter operators will keep buying energy-inefficient old tech. I find it hard to believe.
It just means data centers don't upgrade just because there's a new shiny in town ;)
 

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It probably means that AMD can be smarter to allocate more wafers for the much more important Radeon production, because market share is declining, and AMD is virtually gone from that market!

Super-uber-duper expensive Radeon 7900 series won't help. Better EOL them and start production of smaller and cheaper Radeons.
 
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It just means data centers don't upgrade just because there's a new shiny in town ;)
That's certainly true, but with DDR5 being at 10%, the remaining 90% consists of upgrades to old Lake, old Zen and old Ampere.
 

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That's certainly true, but with DDR5 being at 10%, the remaining 90% consists of upgrades to old Lake, old Zen and old Ampere.
What can I say, when an hour of uptime is measured in millions, you kinda value stability and proven platforms above all else.
New shinies are rolled out gradually, always on the lookout for (potential) problems.
 
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