China claims they have “massive evidence” of anti-trust violations from DRAM makers

China claims they have

China claims they have “massive evidence” of anti-trust violations from DRAM makers

While DRAM pricing is starting to decrease, it is hard to forget how expensive memory pricing has been for the past few quarters, with prices skyrocketing as demand grew in the server market through the growth of cloud computing and the demand for new smartphones across the world. 

While NAND was also affected by these same market forces, DRAM was hit with the harshest price increases, with consumer DRAM pricing increasing by 130% between June 2016 and December 2017, allowing DRAM producers to generate insane profit margins. 

Back in late 2017, Chinese regulators started to investigate allegations of price-fixing within the DRAM market, with three companies being set under the nation’s sights, Samsung, SK Hynix and Micron, who combined control over 90% of the DRAM market. 

Chinese officials have claimed that they have made “important progress” in their investigation, vowing to deepen their probe into the three DRAM giants. Wu Zhenguo, the head of China’s anti-monopoly bureau has stated that their investigation has “yielded massive evidence”, with the probe having the potential to level fines at each DRAM manufacturer that could collectively cost an estimated $800 million and $8 billion based on sales between 2016 and 2017. 

It has been speculated that Samsung, SK Hynix and Micron have manipulated the DRAM market to keep prices high and have delayed capacity expansions to coincide with the introduction of Chinese-made DRAM, which could crash the market and leave Chinese producers without much profit. In effect, this move could kill off China’s DRAM startups, keeping the big three dominants in the memory market.

There have also been allegations that China will focus on the actions of Micron, a US-based company, due to the ongoing US-China trade war, with the nation accounting to 51% of the company’s semiconductor sales in recent years. On the US-side, there have also been complaints that Chinese companies are stealing US technologies to bolster their homegrown semiconductor efforts. 


China claims they have  

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