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piinbinarytoday at 1:17 PM9 repliesview on HN

I have a suspicion these new prices will stick around, even after the RAM shortage ends.

Speaking of which, what's the timeline of the RAM shortage ending? I have no sense for whether it is going to be (for example) 6 months or 3 years.


Replies

revolvingthrowtoday at 1:32 PM

>what's the timeline of the RAM shortage ending?

Barring unusual market forces like Taiwan invasion the timeline to ending the acute shortage seems to be mid 2028. The AI still has plenty of money to burn and is the biggest driver, but we’re also shortly before gaming consoles ought to release a new gen (although who knows whether they won’t get delayed for a while). There was even going to be a small upgrade cycle for nerds waiting for 2nm fabbed devices, same as pre-ai datacenters looking for power efficiency. Plenty of pent-up demand, too, as many people simply make do with what they have but will upgrade once the silliness stops.

If you’re looking for ssd/ram prices to go back to the low of 2024/early 2025 it probably won’t happen before China catches up, which will be a while yet. There is some build up of new capcity happening from current manufacturers but it’s significantly less than what the demand increased by.

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hauntertoday at 1:41 PM

It’s a permanent price hike

Eventually supply and demand will get back in a better balance and we will probably see prices rise slower than inflation until adjusted for inflation prices are close to to where they were before but the actual dollar price isn’t likely to go down.

snarfytoday at 8:05 PM

When the AI bubble pops.

ErneXtoday at 2:11 PM

The new Xbox CEO said recently they are expecting storage prices to be 5x what they were late 2025 by late 2027. And that RAM should be similar.

Anyone making hardware is having a rough time. Like Valve who had to release their new PC at around 40% more expensive than what they originally wanted.

brandricktoday at 1:19 PM

Considering what's causing it, I can't imagine it's a particularly short timeline.

jorvitoday at 1:54 PM

With new fabs built and AI demand shrinking, they will have to. If they don't, considering the last lost price fixing case, they will be absolutely crushed by the EU and probably other governments as well.

mDyJzDPmBdGtoday at 1:32 PM

On supply side 3 years is about right, new plants won't come online faster. Demand might collapse faster if some AI companies go bankrupt or at very least fail next funding round.

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dwa3592today at 2:03 PM

Until China floods the market with their memory which is starting

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justincormacktoday at 1:24 PM

At least 3 years maybe more.