Price gain confirms the dynamic random access memory market has bottomed out after a 15-month slump.SEOUL (Reuters) - Hynix Semiconductor Inc,
the world's No. 2 memory chip maker, said on Monday it raised contract
prices for computer memory chips by about 15 percent last month and
expected further increases in May.
The healthy price gain confirmed the dynamic random access memory
(DRAM) market has bottomed out after a 15-month slump, but analysts say
a recovery this year could be short-lived due to a production drive by
sector leader Samsung Electronics Co Ltd.
Makers of DRAM, after reeling from overproduction and slower PC
demand, have pinned their hopes on spending cutbacks from cash-starved
makers and improving demand ahead of the start of the new school year
and the year-end shopping season.
"We have raised prices around 15 percent in April," said James Kim, vice president in charge of investor relations at Hynix.
Kim did not provide a breakdown of the increases between the first
and latter half of April. He said previously that the DRAM contract
price hike for early April was "minimal."
"We have expectations," Kim said, when asked about the prospect of price increases in May.
Japan's Elpida Memory Inc also had raised prices of DRAM chips, mainly used in personal
computers, by 5-10 percent in the first half of April. Samsung did not
comment on its chip prices but analysts believe it also raised prices
in April.
Samsung's Drive
Kim declined to comment on bigger rival Samsung's plan to aggressively increase DRAM shipments.
Samsung said in late April that the company was aiming to double
DRAM unit shipments this year, higher than previous market expectations
of a 70-80 percent growth. Analysts said the plan could extend the DRAM
market's oversupply and add to pressure on smaller rivals such as Hynix.
"The new scenario leads to a weaker recovery in DRAM prices, which
means few makers will be able to finance investment with their own cash
flow by the end of this year," said Jay Kim, an analyst at Hyundai
Securities.
"Sluggish investment by rivals will help Samsung raise its dominance in the market."
Now DRAM prices are expected to start falling again in the fourth
quarter, after posting limited gains in the second and third quarter,
Kim said.
Samsung had 30.6 percent of the global DRAM market revenue in the
first quarter, according to research firm iSuppli. Hynix and Elpida
Memory Inc. followed with 18.6 percent and 14.5 percent, respectively.
(Reporting by Rhee So-eui; editing by Ken Wills)
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