According to TrendForce’s forecast, this year memory chip manufacturers are expected to earn more than twice as much as those producing computational chips. The combined market volume for memory chips is projected at $551.6 billion compared to just $218.7 billion for the SoC, processor, and GPU market.
Created by Grok. Analysts remind us that the memory market has not yet reached its peak, as, for example, the demand for SSDs still remains far from its maximum. New developments by Nvidia will lead data center operators to increasingly adopt high-capacity QLC SSDs.
The growing income gap between the memory production and semiconductor foundry sectors is also due to differences in the ways they expand their production capacities. A key factor is the level of product standardization: memory manufacturers primarily release standardized, basic product lines, while foundries, producing chips based on mature technological processes, must account for a broad spectrum of technological processes, ranging from 28 nm to over 90 nm.
Market Dynamics and Expansion
This dynamic showcases the greater standardization and economies of scale within the memory production sector compared to the diversification required in foundries supporting technological variety. Nvidia’s focus on AI and data analytics accelerates the demand for QLC SSDs, which offer increased capacity for extensive data storage and management-all of which are essential for contemporary data center operations.
Future developments suggest further integration of sophisticated memory solutions into global technology infrastructure, driven by constant advancements in AI and machine learning. As these sectors continue to expand, the modular and standardized nature of memory chips will likely support rapid scaling to meet burgeoning market demands, underscoring the burgeoning contrast with more diversified semiconductor production.