An acute global shortage of memory chips is forcing AI and consumer electronics companies to fight for dwindling supplies, as prices soar for the unglamorous but essential components.
Japanese electronics stores have begun limiting how many hard disk drives shoppers can buy. Chinese smartphone makers are warning of price increases. Tech giants including Microsoft, Google and ByteDance are scrambling to secure supplies from memory-chip makers such as Micron, Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, according to three people familiar with the discussions.
The squeeze spans almost every type of memory, from flash chips used in USB drives and smartphones to advanced high-bandwidth memory (HBM) that feeds AI chips in data centres. Prices in some segments have more than doubled since February, according to market research firm TrendForce, drawing in traders betting that the rally has further to run.
The fallout could reach beyond tech. Many economists and executives warn the protracted shortage risks slowing AI-based productivity gains and delaying hundreds of billions of dollars in digital infrastructure. It could also add inflationary pressure just as many economies are trying to tame price rises and navigate US tariffs.
“The memory shortage has now graduated from a component-level concern to a macroeconomic risk,” said Sanchit Vir Gogia, CEO of Greyhound Research, a technology advisory firm. The AI build-out “is colliding with a supply chain that cannot meet its physical requirements”.
This examination of the spiralling supply crisis is based on interviews with almost 40 people, including 17 executives at chip makers and distributors. It shows industry efforts to meet voracious appetite for advanced chips — driven by Nvidia and tech giants like Google, Microsoft and Alibaba — created a dual bind: chip makers still can’t produce enough high-end semiconductors for the AI race, yet their tilt away from traditional memory products is choking supply to smartphones, PCs and consumer electronics. Some are now hurrying to course-correct.
Inventory levels fall
Average inventory levels at suppliers of dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) — the main type used in computers and phones — fell to two to four weeks in October from three to eight weeks in July and 13 to 17 weeks in late 2024, according to TrendForce.
The crunch is unfolding as investors question whether the billions of dollars poured into AI infrastructure have inflated a bubble. Some analysts predict a shakeout, with only the biggest and financially strongest companies able to stomach the price increases.
One memory-chip executive said the shortage would delay future data centre projects. New capacity takes at least two years to build but memory-chip makers are wary of overbuilding for fear it could end up idle should the demand surge pass, the person said.
Read: Samsung goes trifold while Apple folds its arms
Samsung and SK Hynix have announced investments in new capacity but haven’t detailed the production split between HBM and conventional memory. SK Hynix has told analysts that the memory shortfall would last until late 2027, Citi said in November.
“These days, we’re receiving requests for memory supplies from so many companies that we’re worried about how we’ll be able to handle all of them. If we fail to supply them, they could face a situation where they can’t do business at all,” Chey Tae-won, chairman of SK Hynix parent SK Group, said at an industry forum in Seoul last month.

OpenAI in October signed initial deals with Samsung and SK Hynix to supply chips for its Stargate project, which would require up to 900 000 wafers per month by 2029. That’s about double current global monthly HBM production, Chey said.
Samsung said it is monitoring the market but wouldn’t comment on pricing or customer relationships. SK Hynix said it is boosting production capacity to meet increased memory demand. Microsoft declined to comment and ByteDance didn’t address questions about the chip strain. Micron and Google didn’t respond to comment requests.
After ChatGPT’s release in November 2022 ignited the generative AI boom, a global rush to build AI data centres led memory makers to allocate more production to HBM, used in Nvidia’s powerful AI processors.
Competition from Chinese rivals making lower-end DRAM, such as ChangXin Memory Technologies, also pushed Samsung and SK Hynix to accelerate their shift to higher-margin products. The South Korean firms account for two-thirds of the DRAM market.
Samsung told customers in May 2024 that it planned to end production of one type of DDR4 chips — an older variety used in PCs and servers — this year, according to a letter seen by Reuters. (The company has since changed course and will extend production, two sources said.) In June, Micron said it had informed customers it would stop shipping DDR4 and its counterpart LPDDR4 — a type used in smartphones — in six to nine months.
ChangXin followed suit in ending most DDR4 production, one source said. The firm declined to comment.
‘Caught off-guard’
This shift, however, coincided with a replacement cycle for traditional data centres and PCs, as well as stronger-than-expected sales of smartphones, which rely on conventional chips. In hindsight, “one could say the industry was caught off-guard”, said Dan Hutcheson, senior research fellow at TechInsights.
Samsung raised prices of server memory chips by up to 60% last month. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, who in October announced deals and shared fried chicken with Samsung Electronics chairman Jay Y Lee during a trip to South Korea, acknowledged the price surge as significant but said Nvidia had secured substantial supply.
Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta in October asked Micron for open-ended orders, telling the company they will take as much as it can deliver, irrespective of price, according to two people briefed on the talks.
Read: Shocking news about RAM prices
China’s Alibaba, ByteDance and Tencent are also leaning on suppliers, dispatching executives to visit Samsung and SK Hynix in October and November to lobby for allocation, the two people and another source said. “Everyone is begging for supply,” one said.
The Chinese firms didn’t address questions about the chip crunch. Nvidia, Meta, Amazon and OpenAI didn’t respond to requests for comment.

In October, SK Hynix said all its chips are sold out for 2026, while Samsung said it had secured customers for its HBM chips to be produced next year. Both firms are expanding capacity to meet AI demand, but new factories for conventional chips won’t come online until 2027 or 2028.
Shares in Micron, Samsung and SK Hynix have rallied this year on chip demand. In September, Micron forecast first-quarter revenue above market estimates while Samsung in October reported its biggest quarterly profit in more than three years.
Consultancy Counterpoint Research expects prices of advanced and legacy memory to rise by 30% through to the fourth quarter and possibly another 20% in early 2026. Chinese smartphone makers Xiaomi and Realme have warned they may have to raise prices.
Francis Wong, Realme India’s chief marketing officer, said the steep increases in memory costs were “unprecedented since the advent of smartphones” and could force the company to lift handset prices by 20-30% by June. “Some manufacturers might save costs on imaging cameras, some on processors and some on batteries,” he said. “But the cost of storage is something all manufacturers must completely absorb; there’s no way to transfer it.”
Xiaomi said it would offset higher memory costs by raising prices and selling more premium phones, adding that its other businesses would help cushion the impact. — Hyunjoo Jin, Fanny Potkin, Wen-Yee Lee, Anton Bridge and Max A Cherney, with Eduardo Baptista, Che Pan, Liam Mo, David Kirton, Heekyong Yang, Stephen Nellis, Jun Yuan Yong and Rachel More, (c) 2025 Reuters
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