- Chinese semiconductor firms CXMT and YMTC are flooding the global memory chip market with domestically produced DRAM and NAND chips, driving down prices and breaking the long-standing monopoly of Samsung, SK Hynix and Micron.
- CXMT's chips are now being used in a Corsair Vengeance DDR5 memory module for the first time, with Corsair turning to China due to shortages and cost, as the big three prioritize data center contracts over consumer-grade supply.
- CXMT's first-quarter revenue surged to 50.8 billion yuan ($7.4 billion), up 719% year over year and net profit hit 33.0 billion yuan ($4.41 billion), reversing a prior loss, with the company preparing for a multi-billion-dollar IPO on the Shanghai Stock Exchange.
- YMTC, despite being on a U.S. trade blacklist, has expanded domestic equipment use and is adding capacity, with two factories producing 200,000 wafers per month and a third factory set to begin operations in Wuhan later this year.
- The timing is critical as industry giants cannot meet demand quickly and CXMT's entry threatens to collapse the supply tightness that has driven memory price rallies, with European markets already open and trade routes ignoring U.S. restrictions.
The global memory chip market is undergoing a seismic shift as Chinese semiconductor firms begin flooding the market with domestically produced DRAM and NAND chips, a move that analysts say will drive down memory and storage prices and offer consumers some much-needed relief from months of soaring costs.
For years, the memory industry has been dominated by three giants, Micron, Samsung and SK Hynix, forming what critics call a memory cartel that has controlled pricing for two decades. But that monopoly is now facing its most serious challenge yet and it comes from China.
CXMT breaks into mainstream products
According to Tom's Hardware, Wccftech and TechSpot, Chinese DRAM maker ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT) has achieved a major milestone: Its chips are now being used in a Corsair Vengeance DDR5 16GB memory module. The kit, bearing the part number "CMK5X16G3E60C36A2-CN," runs at 6,000 MT/s with CL36 speeds and is initially exclusive to the Chinese market.
The "CN" designation in the part number confirms it is a China-exclusive kit, but analysts note the module is still certified for both Intel XMP and AMD EXPO, and includes "UKCA" and "CE" markings indicating compliance with European and British standards.
This is the first time a major global brand has integrated CXMT memory into a consumer product, marking what many see as a turning point. Until now, CXMT has primarily sold to local businesses and lesser-known brands, but landing a Corsair contract signals a dramatic shift in the industry landscape.
The decision by Corsair to source memory from CXMT rather than its usual partners, Samsung, SK Hynix or Micron, is driven by two factors: shortages and cost. As noted in the report, "The shortages that everyone now knows about are the primary reason and then there's the cost factor." The big three memory makers are currently "busy selling out their entire production lines to data centers instead," leaving consumer-grade memory manufacturers scrambling for supply.
CXMT, by contrast, "isn't tied to any data center contracts (for now), so it has largely empty production lines just waiting for customers." The clientele CXMT seems to be targeting, the report states, is "regular consumers left in the dust by the rest of the RAM industry."
CXMT's aggressive expansion is backed by eye-popping financial performance. The company's first-quarter revenue reached 50.8 billion yuan ($7.4 billion), up 719% year over year. Net profit soared to 33.0 billion yuan ($4.41 billion), compared with a loss of 2.83 billion yuan ($384 million) in the same period last year.
The chipmaker is now preparing for a multi-billion-dollar IPO on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. As Goldman noted, "CXMT's updated IPO prospectus, filed last Sunday, indicates that the company is scaling faster and has become materially more profitable than the market had appreciated." CXMT's first-quarter sales and net profit surpassed all listings on the STAR Market, including SMIC, China's largest foundry.
YMTC joins the offensive
But it's not just DRAM. Yangtze Memory Technologies Co (YMTC), China's top flash memory chipmaker, has begun the "tutoring" process for a potential IPO, having hired CITIC Securities for pre-IPO guidance.
Despite being added to a U.S. trade blacklist in late 2022, YMTC has expanded its use of domestic equipment suppliers such as Naura and is aggressively adding capacity. The company currently has two factories with a combined monthly output of 200,000 wafers and a third factory in Wuhan is set to start operations later this year with capacity to produce 50,000 wafers per month by 2027.
The Chinese strategy is straightforward: undercut the competition on price. As the report states, "Chinese chips broke DDR3 and DDR4 pricing on the way in and DDR5 is now next in line for the same treatment."
Both CXMT and YMTC are doubling their wafer output capacity through an "Epic Expansion" initiative already underway. CXMT currently controls about 7.7% of the global DRAM market, counting Alibaba, Tencent and ByteDance among its customers.
The timing is critical. As Seagate's CEO told JPMorgan last Monday, building new factories would take too long, sending the company's stock down 6% as investors realized the industry cannot meet demand. When CXMT fills that gap from outside the cartel, "the supply tightness that has justified the memory ETF rally will collapse," the report warns.
Political risks remain, CXMT could still be added to future U.S. blacklists, but European markets are already open and the trade routes for memory chips do not respect Commerce Department guidance. For consumers weary of sky-high memory prices, the Chinese chip invasion may be the relief they've been waiting for. The memory cartel's 20-year grip on the market is finally loosening.
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Sources include:
ZeroHedge.com
Brighteon.com
BrightU.ai