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Seaside

1/17/2012 1:28 PM EST

RE shifting balance between DRAM and NAND - in response to current/forecasted ...

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resistion

1/14/2012 12:29 PM EST

Why is NOR revenue shrinking? Is it already being replaced by DRAM and NAND?

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Flash revenue expected to overtake DRAM in 2012

Dylan McGrath

1/13/2012 2:15 PM EST

SUNNYVALE, Calif.—Sales of flash memory chips are expected to eclipse sales of DRAM for the first time in 2012, according to market research firm IC Insights Inc.

IC Insights
(Scottsdale, Ariz.) projects that flash memory revenue will hit $32.8 billion in 2012, up 11 percent from 2011. Meanwhile, the firm predicts that DRAM sales will slide to $30.3 billion, down 3 percent from 2011 due to softening average selling prices (ASPs), according to the firm.

Capital spending for DRAM is also expected to decline to less than $5 billion in 2012, according to the firm. This would translate to roughly 4.3 percent of expected DRAM sales, the lowest level ever, according to IC Insights. By contrast, DRAM capital spending equated to roughly 7.3 percent of sales last year and about 11.3 percent of sales in 2010, according to the company.



Since the mid 1990s, flash memory units shipments have grown by a double-digit percentage every year except last year, when units grew by 9 percent, according to Brian Matas, vice president of market research at IC Insights. Matas said Thursday (Jan. 12) that the firm expects flash shipments to return to double digit growth in 2012 and for the foreseeable future.

"There are a lot of mobile platforms that are driving flash growth [to levels] even greater than what we have been seeing," Matas said, pointing to smartphones, media tablets, PC solid-state drives (SSDs) and embedded SSDs.

Of the projected $32.8 billion in NAND sales for 2012, IC Insights projects that $29.5 billion will come from NAND flash, up 15 percent from 2011. Meanwhile, the firm projects that NOR flash revenue will shrink to about $3.3 billion in 2012, down from about $4 billion in 2011.

By 2016, IC Insights projects that NOR flash will account for only 4 percent of all flash memory revenue, down from 13 percent last year and 35 percent in 2007.

IC Insights projects that NAND flash revenue will grow steadily over the next five years, reaching $55.6 billion in 2016. The firm expects DRAM revenue to grow to $54.3 billion in 2016 from $31.2 billion last year.



Matas also predicted consolidation among DRAM players, speculating that the increasing costs of production will cause some weaker players to drop out of the market and curb the over expansion that creates the boom and bust cycles that have plagued DRAM from the beginning.

"It's going to be more difficult for DRAM players to overspend than it was in the past," Matas said, noting that the high cost of modern fabs and production facilities will make it all but impossible for some debt-ridden firms to keep pace.  




Deepak Sekar

1/13/2012 2:40 PM EST

If you include both NAND and NOR flash, the revenue exceeded DRAM even before, right?

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dylan.mcgrath

1/13/2012 4:40 PM EST

No, the way I read the above chart, DRAM revenue was $31.2 billion, while total flash revenue (both NAND and NOR) was $29.6 billion.

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DrQuine

1/14/2012 10:31 AM EST

How do the units of memory (GB) storage sold compare between flash and DRAM? Is flash memory really taking over the market? Since flash is much more expensive, equal dollar sales do not equate to equal memory sales. Since flash memory suffers from limits on rewrite cycles, what is the likely balance in installed memory between the two technologies?

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resistion

1/14/2012 12:29 PM EST

Why is NOR revenue shrinking? Is it already being replaced by DRAM and NAND?

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Seaside

1/17/2012 1:28 PM EST

RE shifting balance between DRAM and NAND - in response to current/forecasted growth in data requirements,server OEMs are aggressively modifying architectures to accommodate NAND and other emerging NVM in order to deal with the increasing power consumption of data centers.

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