4D NAND flash developed by SK Hynix. Source: SK Hynix
US semiconductor manufacturer Western Digital Corp. announced Tuesday it will raise the price of its NAND flash memory chips by 10%.
Earlier this year, another US chipmaker Micron Technology Inc. also announced a 10% price increase.
The string of price hikes follows production disruptions at NAND flash memory plants in Japan jointly owned by Western Digital and Japan's Kioxia Holdings Corp.
The disruption has affected some 14 exabytes, which accounts for 8% of the world’s total NAND flash supply. One exabyte is equal to 1,000 petabytes or one billion gigabytes.
According to Q3 2021 figures, Western Digital and Kioxia boast market shares of 19.3% and 13.2%, respectively.
BENEFIT TO KOREAN CHIPMAKERS
South Korea's Samsung Electronics Co. and SK Hynix Inc. have yet to announce such price adjustments.
Industry insiders expect the Korean juggernauts to be the main beneficiaries of the rise in the spot prices of 3D NAND flash memory chips.
Since the production disruption, the price of 512 gigabyte TLC NANDs increased 6% and that of 256 gigabyte TLC NANDs rose 7%. SATA SSD prices climbed 3%.
Market tracker TrendForce forecasts the two plants jointly owned by Western Digital and Kioxia will not be operating as normal until this autumn and thus expects the fixed transaction price of NAND chips to surge as much as 10%.
The fixed transaction price of NAND chips has been stable for the past eight months; after rising 5.5% last July.
The demand for memory chips is expected to increase around the globe on facilities expansion by tech giants.
Alphabet Inc., Meta Platforms Inc. (formerly Facebook Inc.,) and Amazon.com Inc. have all announced plans to increase facilities investments this year.
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