- Memory chips are priced higher as manufacturers prioritize AI infrastructure over consumer devices, leading to expected declines in global smartphone and PC sales.
- Tight memory supply and rising costs are forcing consumer electronics makers to choose between absorbing expenses or passing them to customers.
What happened
Global memory chip prices have climbed sharply as demand from artificial intelligence data centers absorbs much of the world’s supply, and producers such as Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron struggle to meet requirements, according to market analysts and industry executives. The rapid build-out of infrastructure by companies including OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft has shifted production priorities toward high-margin memory used in servers rather than consumer electronics components.
As a result, manufacturers from Britain’s Raspberry Pi to HP Inc. and other PC makers have begun raising prices on laptops, smartphones, and gaming consoles to offset higher component costs. Research firms such as IDC and Counterpoint now forecast at least a 2 percent decline in global smartphone shipments this year and steeper drops in PC and console markets, reversing earlier growth expectations.
Intel’s CFO has publicly acknowledged that rising memory prices could limit revenue from client computing, illustrating how component cost inflation is affecting even larger chip and system makers. Smaller and mid-range device makers face steeper challenges, as they have less leverage to absorb increased costs or negotiate favorable contracts.
Also Read: https://btw.media/all/mobile-devices/ramageddon-spreads-to-indias-smartphone-market/
Why it’s important: ripple effects through tech supply chains
The current memory price surge is not just a transient market blip. It reflects a broader structural shift in the global memory supply chain, where production capacity is increasingly directed toward specialized memory for AI use—including high-bandwidth memory (HBM)—at the expense of conventional DRAM and NAND flash. This reallocation has triggered a memory supply shortage lasting from 2024 into 2026, with sustained price inflation across key component lines.
For consumer electronics makers, which operate on thin margins, these memory cost pressures raise strategic challenges. Companies must decide whether to keep absorbing higher input costs, eroding profitability, or pass them on to customers, risking further demand contraction in an already cautious market. Emerging evidence of slowing consumer upgrades suggests that price elasticity could sharply dampen sales of phones, laptops, and consoles.
There are also implications for global supply chains and regional manufacturing strategies. Firms such as Micron Technology are investing in new fabrication capacity to address long-term demand for DRAM and related products, but such projects take years to complete, and the near-term bottlenecks may persist.
The memory pricing dynamic underscores how the explosive growth of AI infrastructure—while a boon for server and data center vendors—can impose real costs on adjacent technology sectors and consumers, prompting questions about the optimal balance between enterprise demand and the health of broader electronics markets.
Also Read: https://btw.media/all/tech-trends/ai/ai-boom-fuels-global-chip-supply-imbalance/
