Samsung to delay its planned DDR4 end-of-life due to signing a long-term 'non-cancellable, non-returnable' contract with key customer — agreement will not alleviate consumer shortage, supply earmarked for server clients

RAM
RAM (Image credit: Shutterstock)

Samsung has reportedly delayed the shutdown of its DDR4 production line, which it initially announced earlier this year. According to DigiTimes [machine translated], the South Korean chipmaker is doing this as 16GB DDR4 modules hit a record of $60 in the spot market. This pricing made the DDR4 market lucrative enough for Samsung to delay the shutdown of its existing DDR4 production line. However, it will not set up new ones to accommodate increasing consumer demand. In line with this, reports indicate that one customer has already signed an “NCNR contract” with the company to secure its DDR4 supply.

NCNR (non-cancellable, non-returnable) contracts mean a client will receive a fixed number of memory modules at a fixed price, and that the price or volume cannot be modified in the future. In other words, the customer is contractually obliged to buy the product regardless of any other factors.

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Jowi Morales
Contributing Writer

Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.

  • teeejay94
    Im so sick of hearing people talk about old technology from a few years ago as if it were the same as 1999. Get out of the past already honestly the title alone or the description just after is evidence enough. DDR4 will outlast DDR, DDR2 and DDR3 by years upon years, its companies like Samsung that just move on and make it seem like the technology is useless when it really isnt, DDR4 will still hit over 4K MT/s which is still insanely fast in 2025. Planned obsolescence is the biggest cancer to the computer community and it convinces people that the technology is no longer relevant because they are sheep that follow everything these mega-corps say and do. Sorry to be the sheep conspiracy guy but its the truth 🤷💯 Big herd going baaaaaaaa we need ddr5 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
    Reply
  • araghur12
    teeejay94 said:
    Im so sick of hearing people talk about old technology from a few years ago as if it were the same as 1999. Get out of the past already honestly the title alone or the description just after is evidence enough. DDR4 will outlast DDR, DDR2 and DDR3 by years upon years, its companies like Samsung that just move on and make it seem like the technology is useless when it really isnt, DDR4 will still hit over 4K MT/s which is still insanely fast in 2025. Planned obsolescence is the biggest cancer to the computer community and it convinces people that the technology is no longer relevant because they are sheep that follow everything these mega-corps say and do. Sorry to be the sheep conspiracy guy but its the truth 🤷💯 Big herd going baaaaaaaa we need ddr5 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
    What are you even yapping about
    Reply
  • Dav_Daddy
    teeejay94 said:
    Im so sick of hearing people talk about old technology from a few years ago as if it were the same as 1999. Get out of the past already honestly the title alone or the description just after is evidence enough. DDR4 will outlast DDR, DDR2 and DDR3 by years upon years, its companies like Samsung that just move on and make it seem like the technology is useless when it really isnt, DDR4 will still hit over 4K MT/s which is still insanely fast in 2025. Planned obsolescence is the biggest cancer to the computer community and it convinces people that the technology is no longer relevant because they are sheep that follow everything these mega-corps say and do. Sorry to be the sheep conspiracy guy but its the truth 🤷💯 Big herd going baaaaaaaa we need ddr5 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
    I couldn't agree with you more. In 95% of consumer use cases you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between DDR4 & DDR5 because the memory itself isn't particularly close to being the bottle neck.

    Same reason benchmarks of different DDR5 speeds and manufacturers are all over the place. The memory controller on your motherboard is going to determine how fast your build is. I'm sure it won't always be this way but that is how it stands now.
    Reply