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Date: 29th May 2011
DRAMeXchange: Price increase momentum
of DDR3 due to Japanese quake weakening
According to DRAMeXchange, a research department of Trendforce
Corp., 2H'May contract prices will remain flat from the
previous period. DDR3 2GB's average contract price is US$18.75
(1Gb $1.02) and 4GB is US$36.5 (2Gb $2.12). The momentum
in price increase, derived from the influence of the Japan
quake, is weakening. Shin-Etsu and SUMCO have improved the
poor yield in the 40nm production. Also, the yield rates
are going back to the previous full capacity. Both Shin-Etsu
and SUMCO have made promising progresses in getting back
to the previous capacity. Shortage in raw wafer is no longer
a concern. Slow PC demands and the increasing DRAM inventories
of PC OEMs (to around 4 weeks), contract prices in June
are susceptible to changes.
DRAM Technology Migration Has Reached Bottleneck, Entry
Barrier is Established with the Declining Supply Bit Growth
After the fierce competition in 2008, DRAM makers have
accelerated their post-70nm technology migration, and time
to market has become the most critical factor to their profitability.
We are now seeing two new technologies in a year, comparing
to one technology that lasted for years. DRAM makers are
moving into 40nm, and even 30nm domain. In general, each
migration step brings around 20% to 30% increase in bit
growth. The improvement and the stability of the yield rates
have surfaced as serious road blocks. Some makers have demonstrated
technology migration is evidenced very challenging.
Samsung outperforms any other DRAM makers. Its 35nm technology
will produce 30% of the total output by the end of 2Q11
and over 50% output by the end of the year. Hynix is taking
on the challenges from both 38nm technology and 6F2 layout.
Its output from 38nm will be very limited this year. Elpida
has fully migrated to 45nm in 4Q10 and will commence mass
production on 38nm in June with the target to raise the
portion to 50% by end of 2011. Nanya and Inotera are concentrating
on their moves to 42nm and the corresponding yield rate
improvements. A further move into 30nm is a possibility
at the very end of the year. Other than technologies, the
makers are also allocating more wafers to higher margin
products like server and mobile DRAMs to improvement the
profitability of their own.
The race for finer technologies is on. DRAM makers will
continue on their refinements of 30nm technologies and yield
rates. As the DRAM makers further move into the 20nm frontier,
there lies a bigger challenge to the validity of Moore's
Law. Beside the design and stability requirements, the expensive
EUV equipment will also pose as an entry barrier for the
competition into the next generation. Only a handful of
highly profitable makers can plunge enough capex to stay
in the game. The only good news for the rest of the group
is that we expect 30nm will remain as the mainstream technology
until 2012. Hopefully, it will leave enough space for the
Taiwanese DRAM vendors to catch up. DRAM bit growth until
then will slow down and the price pressure will be eased
on the over- supplied commodity DRAM. Hopefully, the DRAM
prices will come back up to rational and profitable level.
Source: DRAMeXchange
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