AI-led DRAM supply crunch reportedly has Morgan Stanley downgrading major OEMs — skyrocketing memory prices could erode server and PC margins

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The ongoing DRAM shortage and subsequent doubling (or more) in price we've seen in recent weeks is a serious hurdle for prospective PC builders, and threatens to make computing and electronics devices pricier for at least a couple of years. According to X posts by @juklanosreeve (Jukan), Morgan Stanley's market analysts believe that even large manufacturers and integrators are set to take hits, going as far as downgrading stock position advice ratings for some.

For reference, Morgan Stanley has three ratings for stock performance predictions: OW (Overweight, or good), EW (Equal-weight, or neutral), and UW (Under-weight). Dell reportedly got a hard slap from OW to UW, while HP, Asustek, and Pegatron went from EW to OW.

Bruno Ferreira
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Bruno Ferreira is a contributing writer for Tom's Hardware. He has decades of experience with PC hardware and assorted sundries, alongside a career as a developer. He's obsessed with detail and has a tendency to ramble on the topics he loves. When not doing that, he's usually playing games, or at live music shows and festivals.

  • thestryker
    Apple benefits from using the same memory for all of their products so they can safely make huge buys in advance. It's also possible that LPDDR isn't seeing quite the squeeze yet that regular DDR is due to the massive scale of the market.
    Reply
  • hotaru251
    Morgan Stanley believes OEMs/ODMs will eat part of the cost of the DRAM, lowering their margins, instead of just passing it all on to customers.

    ngl I doubt this.
    What are the customers gonna do? Buy it themself?

    People buying prebuilts arent gonna build 1 themself so they will either get nothing or they suck it up and pay whats asked regardless.
    Reply
  • thestryker
    hotaru251 said:
    ngl I doubt this.
    What are the customers gonna do? Buy it themself?

    People buying prebuilts arent gonna build 1 themself so they will either get nothing or they suck it up and pay whats asked regardless.
    It makes sense that they'd eat some of it right now and then slowly raise prices over time. They'll want to avoid the shock that happened on the retail market with DRAM pricing. Over time I absolutely agree they're going to want their margins back and won't be eating it long term.
    Reply