Though Samsung has denied the rumor that its HBM3e passed NVIDIA’s qualification tests, multiple Taiwanese companies in the supply chain reportedly learned that the product is expected to receive certification soon, and will start shipping in Q3. As memory manufacturers are said to shift at least 20-30% of their production capacity to HBM, tightening supply further, DDR5 prices in Q3 will reportedly be on the rise.
It is reported that some of Samsung’s supply chain partners have recently received information to place orders and reserve capacity as soon as possible, which indicates the memory giant’s HBM may begin shipments smoothly in the second half of the year. The move may also imply that the internal capacity allocation within Samsung will accelerate, shifting the focus of production lines to HBM.
Taiwanese memory supply chain sources reportedly believe that the news of Samsung’s HBM certification is likely to be confirmed at the upcoming Samsung financial report meeting, which will take place on July 31. It is said that memory manufacturers will relocate at least 20-30% of their production capacity, driving DDR5 prices to rise.
TrendForce notes that a recovery in demand for general servers—coupled with an increased production share of HBM by DRAM suppliers—has led suppliers to maintain their stance on hiking prices. As a result, the ASP of DRAM in Q3 is expected to continue rising, with an anticipated increase of 8–13%. Due to high average inventory levels of DDR4 among buyers, purchasing momentum will be focused on DDR5.
On the other hand, regarding NAND prices in Q3, TrendForce reports that while the enterprise sector continues to invest in server infrastructure, the consumer electronics market remains lackluster. This, combined with NAND suppliers aggressively ramping up production in the second half of the year, is likely to curb the blended price hike to a modest 5–10%.
According to TrendForce’s latest analysis, Samsung’s initial plan to pass NVIDIA’s certification in Q2 was delayed, making it falling behind SK hynix and Micron. Simultaneously, some HBM suppliers also faced lower-than-expected production yields, leading to concerns about a shortage of HBM3e 8hi materials for the H200 GPU shipments starting in Q2 2024.
However, Samsung adjusted its 1alpha nm front-end production process and back-end stacking process in the first half of 2024, leading the industry to expect that sample production could be completed in Q3 2024, followed by product certification.
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(Photo credit: Samsung)