End of a chip boom? Memory chip price drop spooks
investors
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[January 15, 2018]
By Joyce Lee
SEOUL (Reuters) - After a blistering
year-and-a-half long surge, a sudden drop in some memory prices,
followed by Samsung Electronics Co's disappointing profit estimate, is
causing jitters among investors who had bet the chip boom would last at
least another year.
Amid news that the market has started losing some steam - prices of
high-end flash memory chips, which are widely used in smartphones,
dropped nearly 5 percent in the fourth quarter - some analysts now
expect the industry's growth rate will fall by more than half this year
to 30 percent.
That led shares in Samsung to dip 7.5 percent last week, while its home
rival SK Hynix fell 6.2 percent. But analysts say that there is unlikely
to be a sudden crash, and that 2018 should be a relatively stable year
for chipmakers.
The $122 billion memory chip industry has enjoyed an unprecedented boom
since mid-2016, expanding nearly 70 percent in 2017 alone thanks to
robust growth of smartphones and cloud services that require more
powerful chips that can store more data.
Supply also has become more disciplined following years of consolidation
that reduced the number of manufacturers to a handful from around 20 in
mid-1990s.
"Memory chips will likely see a gradual price decline in 2018 if demand
remains strong and appetite from servers holds," said Lee Jae-yun,
analyst at Yuanta Securities Korea.
But growth of 30 percent is a strong gain in an industry known for
volatility, and the market is still on course for its longest ever boom
after shrinking 6 percent in 2016.
Last year's explosive growth gave chipmakers cash to reinvest and boost
output, analysts said. The supply of NAND flash memory chips, in
particular, will grow 43 percent this year, up from last year's 34
percent, causing prices to drop by about 10 percent, brokerage Nomura
estimates.
Nomura expects growth in output will be largely led by the likes of
Western Digital, Toshiba Corp and Micron Technology Inc as they seek to
catch up with top-ranked Samsung, which controls about 40 percent of the
flash memory chip market.
NO DOOM SEEN
Smartphone vendors have been including more memory in their phones and
charging more for them, allowing them to weather last year's price
surge, analysts say.
Average DRAM memory of new models launched last quarter increased by 38
percent from the second quarter of 2016, while NAND content measured by
gigabyte jumped 84 percent, according to an analysis by BNP Paribas.
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Mobile memory chips
made by chipmaker SK Hynix are seen in this picture illustration
taken in Seoul May 10, 2013. REUTERS/Lee Jae-Won
Such solid demand will keep the industry's margin healthy this year, and
chipmakers' investment in more advanced technology will help them cut production
costs and stay profitable even as prices ease, analysts say.
Macquarie estimates Samsung's chip division's operating profit margin jumped to
47 percent last year from 26.5 percent in 2016, and will rise further to 55.5
percent this year.
While the NAND flash market may soften somewhat, the DRAM memory chip market,
which is about $20 billion bigger than the NAND industry, is seen as much
tighter. Prices are expected to gain nearly 9 percent because of a severe supply
shortage.
With DRAM manufacturers' rushing to ramp up production - they are likely to
nearly quadruple capital spending for 2017 and 2018 combined to $38 billion from
2016's $10 billion - prices may decline as much as 18 percent next year,
according to Nomura.
That gives some investors confidence in the industry's long-term future.
"Besides some minute adjustment, I am currently holding Samsung shares almost
without change,” said Kim Hyun-su, fund manager at IBK Asset Management. “I
don't think the share price is expensive as they have recently been increasing
dividends a lot - and as of now, the expected profit levels are very high.”
PRESSURE FROM CLIENTS
Smartphone makers account for about one-third of global memory chip demand, and
many have been pressing suppliers to lower prices.
In late December, state-run China Daily reported China's National Development
and Reform Commission (NDRC) was paying close attention to a surge in the price
of mobile phone storage chips and could look into possible price fixing by
Samsung and others that make them.
More than 50 percent of Samsung's 2017 memory business revenue came from China,
according to chip price tracker DRAMeXchange.
"Although supply-demand dynamics are still solid, clients' pressure to lower
prices make it hard to predict" what will happen, said MS Hwang, an analyst at
Samsung Securities, which is an affiliate of Samsung Electronics.
(Reporting by Joyce Lee; Editing by Miyoung Kim and Gerry Doyle)
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