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HomeTechnologyHardwareBlogsOM in the News: The Memory-Chip Shortage
OM in the News: The Memory-Chip Shortage
ManufacturingHardware

OM in the News: The Memory-Chip Shortage

•February 16, 2026
The OM Blog by Heizer, Render, & Munson
The OM Blog by Heizer, Render, & Munson•Feb 16, 2026
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Key Takeaways

  • •DRAM and NAND prices up seven‑fold in a year.
  • •AI data‑center demand fuels memory scarcity.
  • •Laptop prices rose up to 30% due to chip costs.
  • •Manufacturers cut memory specs or discontinue low‑end models.
  • •Tight supply projected through 2028, limiting device shipments.

Summary

A seven‑fold surge in DRAM and NAND flash prices is straining the consumer‑tech supply chain. AI‑driven data‑center expansion is the primary catalyst, leaving smartphones, PCs and gaming consoles with higher component costs. OEMs are responding by raising retail prices, trimming memory specifications, or dropping low‑end models, while analysts forecast tight memory supply through 2028.

Pulse Analysis

The memory‑chip crunch stems from an unprecedented convergence of demand and supply constraints. As generative AI workloads multiply, data‑center operators are stockpiling DRAM and NAND flash at volumes that dwarf traditional consumer needs. This surge has outpaced the incremental capacity expansions of major fabs, driving contract prices to historic highs—up to seven times year‑over‑year. The price shock reverberates through the entire electronics ecosystem, inflating bill‑of‑materials costs for devices that rely heavily on memory, such as smartphones, laptops, and gaming consoles.

Device manufacturers are scrambling to protect margins while maintaining market relevance. Some, like Dell, have passed a portion of the cost increase to end‑users, raising laptop prices by as much as 30 percent. Others are re‑engineering products, reducing RAM capacity in budget lines or discontinuing low‑memory variants altogether, as seen with Xiaomi’s recent mid‑tier phone. These tactics can erode brand equity and limit consumer choice, especially in price‑sensitive segments. Moreover, memory now accounts for roughly 30 percent of a PC’s total cost, making it a critical lever for profitability and pricing strategy.

Looking ahead, the outlook remains bearish. Industry forecasts suggest that memory supply will stay constrained through 2028, given the capital‑intensive nature of fab expansion and the continued appetite for AI infrastructure. Companies may need to diversify their component sourcing, invest in alternative memory technologies, or redesign products to be more memory‑efficient. Until supply catches up, the ripple effects—higher retail prices, reduced specifications, and potential shipment declines—are likely to persist, reshaping the competitive dynamics of the consumer‑tech market.

OM in the News: The Memory-Chip Shortage

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