Memory Chip Squeeze Widens Gap Between Market Winners and Losers

18 hours ago 13
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(Bloomberg) — The relentless surge in memory chip prices over the past few months has driven a vast divide between winners and losers in the stock market, and investors don’t see any end in sight.

Financial Post

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Companies from game console maker Nintendo Co. to big PC brands and Apple Inc. suppliers are seeing shares slump on profitability concerns. Memory producers, meanwhile, are soaring to unprecedented heights. Money managers and analysts are now assessing which firms can best navigate the squeeze by locking in supplies, raising product prices or redesigning to use less memory.

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A Bloomberg gauge of global consumer electronics makers is down 10% since the end of September while a basket of memory makers including Samsung Electronics Co. has surged roughly 160%. The question now is how much is priced in.

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“What remains underappreciated is the risk around duration — current valuations largely factor in that the disruption will normalize within one to two quarters,” said Vivian Pai, a fund manager at Fidelity International. “We believe industry tightness is likely to persist,” possibly through the rest of the year, she added.

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Memory chip shortages and pricing are being mentioned frequently by companies in earnings reports and conference calls. In one of the latest examples, Honda Motor Co. noted Tuesday that supply risks are emerging for memory components.

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Investors are hearing the alarm bells. Shares of Qualcomm Inc. fell more than 8% last Thursday after the smartphone processor maker signaled memory constraints will limit phone production. Nintendo slid the most in 18 months in Tokyo the day after it warned of margin pressure from the shortages.

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PC makers are among those hit the hardest. Both Lenovo Group Ltd. and Dell Technologies Inc. have dropped over 25% from their respective peaks in October. Worries that higher chip prices will dampen PC demand have also spread to Swiss peripherals maker Logitech International SA, which has declined nearly 30% from a November peak.

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Elsewhere, shares of Chinese electric vehicle and smartphone makers from BYD Co. to Xiaomi Corp. have also been sluggish on worries related to the chip shortages.

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“Memory prices have really moved from a background conversation to headlines this earnings season,” said Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo. “The market broadly understands that memory prices are up and supply is tight — that’s no longer new information, so I would assume that’s priced in. But it does look like the timeline of this supply tightness is now starting to be questioned.”

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Memory ‘Supercycle’

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Concerns over demand and earnings are weighing on the corporate landscape, compounded by worries that massive AI infrastructure spending by US hyperscalers will further exacerbate memory-chip shortages. The massive build‑out of AI infrastructure led by the likes of Amazon.com Inc. has shifted production capacity toward high-bandwidth memory and away from traditional DRAM. 

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