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Global chip memory shortages drive electronics prices higher

A deepening shortage of advanced memory chips is driving up costs across the global technology sector, forcing companies like Apple and Microsoft to raise prices while accelerating a new wave of semiconductor investment.

Apple confirmed price increases for Mac, iPad, and other devices as high bandwidth memory (HBM) costs surge alongside the rapid expansion of AI data centers. Microsoft will follow with higher Xbox prices starting August 1, citing a more than 2.5-fold jump in memory and storage costs, with 512GB models rising by $100 and 1TB versions by $150.

Supply shock spreads through the market

The pressure became visible in mid-June when Apple’s chief executive warned of tightening supply and rising component costs. Within a week, he described the cost escalation as unprecedented in decades, underscoring how quickly conditions have shifted.

At the center of the disruption is a supply-demand imbalance driven by AI infrastructure growth. Demand for high-performance memory has exceeded production capacity, creating a bottleneck that is rippling through the entire electronics supply chain.

Micron profits highlight severity of constraints

Micron’s latest earnings illustrate the scale of the imbalance. The company reported quarterly revenue of $41.46 billion, up sharply from $9.30 billion a year earlier, with gross margins reaching 84.9 percent and non-GAAP earnings per share of $25.11.

Guidance for the upcoming quarter points to revenue near $50 billion, with margins around 86 percent and earnings per share of $31—levels rarely seen in cyclical manufacturing industries.

The company has also secured 16 long-term contracts running through 2030, totaling about $100 billion in minimum value. Most of these agreements include take-or-pay clauses and pricing floors, ensuring profitability remains above previous cycle peaks.

Years of underinvestment now catching up

Industry executives say earlier periods of pricing pressure limited capacity expansion, contributing to today’s shortages. As demand accelerates, clients are now facing the consequences of that underinvestment.

High bandwidth memory is particularly difficult to scale. Production requires advanced techniques such as through-silicon vias, chip stacking, bonding, and complex packaging, all of which extend production timelines and constrain supply growth.

Massive investments signal long-term shortage

Governments and companies are now moving to address the gap, though relief will not come quickly. South Korea has announced an â‚©800 trillion plan to build four new semiconductor plants, split between Samsung and SK Hynix.

However, new wafer fabrication facilities typically take four to five years to become operational, meaning additional supply is unlikely to significantly impact the market before 2027.

SK Group’s chairman has warned that memory shortages could persist through 2030 due to limits in both wafer production and advanced packaging capacity.

Equipment and materials makers see strong demand

The expanding investment cycle is already benefiting suppliers across the semiconductor ecosystem:

  • Equipment firms such as ASML, Applied Materials, Lam Research, KLA, Teradyne, and Ichor are seeing rising demand tied to new factory construction
  • Materials providers supplying specialty gases, photoresists, CMP slurries, and wafers are positioned for recurring revenue growth as production volumes increase

Unlike equipment sales, which are tied to initial factory buildouts, materials demand continues throughout the life of each chip, creating a more sustained growth cycle. The complexity of HBM further increases materials consumption compared with traditional DRAM.

China emerges as alternative supply channel

At the same time, tensions between device manufacturers and component suppliers are pushing companies to explore alternative sourcing options. Chinese memory producers such as ChangXin Memory and Yangtze Memory are increasingly viewed as potential partners for buyers seeking better pricing leverage.

Domestic Chinese equipment and materials firms, including North Huachuang and Naura, are also gaining attention as beneficiaries of both global supply diversification and local production expansion.

Cost burden shifts to end users

Analysts expect the current investment wave to reshape the semiconductor supply chain over the coming years, linking AI infrastructure demand more tightly with chip production capacity.

Until new factories come online, however, the cost pressure is likely to persist—leaving companies little choice but to pass higher component prices on to end users as the global memory shortage continues.


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