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The HBM absorbs the DRAM. The first market where the general public sees the note: India, whose affordable smartphones start to rise in price or decrease in RAM.
In plain terms - AI demand is absorbing memory capacity (HBM/DRAM). The Indian smartphone market is the first to visibly pay the price - price increases, RAM reduction on entry-level models.
TechCrunch (July 17, 2026, « AI-driven memory crunch jolts India's smartphone market ») reports that the Indian smartphone market is seeing prices rise and/or RAM in entry-level models decrease. Explanation: the AI rush has redirected memory capacity towards HBM (High Bandwidth Memory for GPUs) and large server DRAM, at the expense of consumer LPDDR. This is a direct continuation of the memory-chip-capex thread: SK Hynix $26.5bn Wall Street landing (#1000), CXMT $8.5bn IPO (#1112), CXMT trillion-yuan target (#1194), Nanya quadruple capex (#1030), Korea signals HBM peak (#1080).
The memory crunch is the first visible downstream signal of AI capex. So far, the story has been B2B - datacenters, HBM roadmaps, Hynix/Nanya/CXMT capex. Here, the price that an individual pays for their entry-level model is increasing. This is the first point where the consumer is confronted with the cost of the AI rush, without being sold a chatbot.
India is the canary because three factors intersect: (1) it imports most of its memory; (2) the entry-level segment is very price-sensitive; (3) the rupee is under relative pressure. The same mechanism will affect other emerging markets (Indonesia, Nigeria, Brazil) - India just hits the visible friction earlier.
For a BOM decision-maker: RAM forecasts for 2027 must integrate the persistence of the crunch, not a return to normalcy. For a memory investor: cycles are longer than usual - but watch for the first sign of HBM saturation on the hyperscaler side.
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I wonder if this DRAM squeeze will lead to innovation in memory technology or just higher prices for consumers.
It might drive innovation, but companies could also just optimize software to use less memory.
This DRAM squeeze is concerning. Will it affect performance or just the price?
Capex mémoire : la course aux HBM/DRAM