DDR5 RAM Prices Drop Sharply Across US, Europe, and China

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Global RAM Pricing Ripple Effects!

Story Highlight
  • Wholesalers in Shenzhen are dumping DDR5 stock at losses to regain cash, leading to price cuts of up to 30% in just a few days.
  • High-capacity 32GB modules have seen massive price tags slashed by more than half in some instances
  • Retail interest has stalled after months of high prices, forcing merchants to prioritize moving inventory over maintaining profit levels.

China’s DDR5 memory market has reacted to a sudden wave of aggressive sell-offs at any price. What initially appeared to be a one-day correction has escalated into aggressive selling in Shenzhen, where module prices have fallen by as much as 30% within days. This was not a progressive price reduction but rather a direct liquidation, with wholesalers clearing inventory to recover cash.

The focus is on Huaqiangbei, where a major portion of the country’s actual component commerce is based, and that’s where the hit was felt. Hopefully, we’ll see something similar here as well.

V Color DDR5 11

The best example of this is, once again, the 32GB DDR5 modules, which used to cost over 3,000 RMB (375 euros) but have since dropped to between 500 and 1,050 RMB, with prices reaching 1,950 RMB (245 euros). This change is too significant to ignore, yet too localized to apply without context.

The important issue here is not the price drop itself, but the fact that it is occurring at a time when the world is under immense strain. Even merchants are discussing weak short-term demand and the need to increase inventory turnover.

The retail channel has lost traction after months of inflated prices, and when demand slows, the Chinese market answers as it always does, with sharp price decreases and no room to maintain artificially high prices. Nobody wants to lose money, and there are no buyers. Consumers are saving money, and rightfully so.

DDR5 in China collapses due to aggresive selloffs

This does not imply that DDR5 has suddenly lost value, but rather, the accumulated stock in the distribution channel is beginning to become excess in China, and when there is excess stock, sales occur everywhere.

Another important issue is that the Shenzhen ecosystem operates differently from big manufacturers’ contract markets, with fast liquidity, speculation, and constant turnover. That’s why the movements are so violent and difficult to imitate outside of China; that’s why we don’t see them in Europe, Korea, Japan, or the United States.

However, other industry insiders believe that this adjustment does not alter the underlying trend, as memory remains a vital resource in data centers and artificial intelligence, and production is more centered on that sector. This weakens the consumer market, particularly when purchase rates do not keep pace.

Outside of China, price declines are occurring, but they are much weaker and do not follow the liquidation pattern. This leaves Shenzhen as both a leading indicator and an extreme environment that exaggerates market moves.

Similarly, sales are already declining by double digits in European stores. Nobody wants to overpay, and if this becomes the new normal, many will leave the market for a long time.

What we’re seeing isn’t the end of the cycle, but it’s just an internal adjustment in the Chinese market. However, it shows that there is a lot of speculation both inside and beyond the country. Now the question is whether this will remain in China or spread to the rest of the market in the coming weeks, because when China starts selling cheap DDR5 at this scale, it doesn’t stay a local problem; it becomes a global pricing event.

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