The memory stock cycle of boom-bust-repeat is over, executives say

The memory stock cycle of boom-bust-repeat is over, executives say


Memory makers see surge in AI demand as hyperscalers lock in long-term contracts

The artificial intelligence spending blitz has the memory industry dancing to a new tune.

Shares of Micron are up more than 370% over the past year, while Sandisk, which only listed in February of last year, is up more than 1100%.

For decades, memory stocks were stuck in a trader’s game, a boom-bust-repeat pattern, but executives now say that AI has structurally broken the old cycle, and prices are showing no signs of coming down.

“We will continue to raise prices because the industry will continue to raise prices,” HPE CEO Antonio Neri told CNBC. “There is not enough supply for demand.”

An executive at hard drive maker Seagate told the South China Morning Post on Tuesday that memory price hikes are likely to become “the new normal” for the next few years.

South Korea’s SK Hynix, one of the biggest producers of memory in the world, told CNBC that the entire memory industry is undergoing structural change.

“The company’s customers, including hyperscalers, have increasingly preferred long-term contracts over the one-year agreements that were more common in the past,” a spokesperson said in a statement.

Micron told CNBC that customers are now more than willing to sign long-term supply agreements to lock-in memory for years.

Broadcom CEO Hock Tan said on his company’s earnings call last week that he’s locked in supply all the way through 2028.

Today’s AI workloads require a fundamentally different and far more memory-intensive architecture than anything the industry was built to support before.

Meta announced a new in-house AI chip on Wednesday and also noted concerns about access to the high-bandwidth memory it needs.

“We’re absolutely worried about HBM supply,” Meta Vice President of Engineering Yee Jiun Song told CNBC. “But we think that we have secured our supply for what we’re planning to build out.”

As hyperscalers crowd out consumer supply and with no meaningful relief coming until 2027 at the earliest, the AI buildout may have pushed memory into a new era.

How ETF investors are keeping sight of their long-term objectives, amidst wild market swings
Choose CNBC as your preferred source on Google and never miss a moment from the most trusted name in business news.



Source

Jim Cramer says Tim Cook accomplished something ‘almost impossible’ as Apple CEO
Technology

Jim Cramer says Tim Cook accomplished something ‘almost impossible’ as Apple CEO

CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Tuesday reflected on the legacy of Tim Cook, arguing that the longtime leader of Apple achieved something many in corporate America consider “almost impossible.” “You have heard a lot about Tim Cook today and for good reason,” the “Mad Money” host said. “He built the greatest consumer-based enterprise in history.” Cook, […]

Read More
SpaceX says it can buy Cursor later this year for  billion or pay  billion for ‘our work together’
Technology

SpaceX says it can buy Cursor later this year for $60 billion or pay $10 billion for ‘our work together’

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket is displayed outside a Space Exploration Technologies Corp. facility in Hawthorne, California, on March 26, 2026. Patrick T. Fallon | Afp | Getty Images SpaceX said it’s struck a deal with artificial intelligence startup Cursor, obtaining the right to acquire the company for $60 billion later this year, or to […]

Read More
Jim Cramer says these stocks show why you need to trade on fundamentals, not fear
Technology

Jim Cramer says these stocks show why you need to trade on fundamentals, not fear

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said stock sell-offs can be painful for investors, but they can also create opportunities for those willing to look past fear-driven narratives and focus on fundamentals. “Tailspins can be mighty nasty,” Cramer said Tuesday on “Mad Money.” “If you own a stock that’s caught in one, it’s very hard to hang on, […]

Read More