A report by market analyst, TrendForce Investigations(opens in new tab), paints a sobering picture of the state of the memory industry right now. According to the report, memory pricing dropped at the end of last year, forcing the likes of Micron and Kioxia to reduce the production of DRAM and NAND memory. This means that the current low prices for RAM and SSDs will be short-lived.
Micron is one of the big three suppliers of computer memory, and alongside Samsung and SK Hynix. This oligopoly is responsible for producing 95% of the RAM chips that make their way into our machines. The fact that one of those is reducing production means RAM chips will be scarcer and therefore more expensive.
If Micron feels the need to reduce production, then the other two probably aren't far behind.
The reason Micron has made the move is due to the larger consumer electronics market being weaker than expected. Add in rising inflation, the Russian-Ukraine war, and the continued pressure from the pandemic, and it's bad news for plenty of electronics. In fact, things are so bad on the NAND flash front, that the report suggests that some manufacturers are selling at a loss right now.
This looks like it's going to have a knock-on effect when it comes to introducing new technologies as well. Micron is said to be focusing on its existing 176-layer NAND flash instead of ramping up production of its 232-layer NAND flash(opens in new tab) as we head into the end of the year. That's a technology that's expected to underpin the performance of PCIe 5.0 NVMe SSDs as well.
These new PCIe 5.0 SSDs are expected to start shipping in November of this year, now that AMD and Intel now both have supporting platforms. AMD's Ryzen 7000(opens in new tab) chips and
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