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RAM Prices May Finally Ease

  • 2 hours ago
  • 1 min read

After months of sharp increases, early signs suggest RAM prices could begin to stabilise and potentially decline. The memory market has been under intense pressure, driven largely by surging demand from AI data centres, which has pushed prices higher across both consumer and enterprise hardware.


Recent trends indicate that retail prices, particularly for newer DDR5 memory, are starting to soften in some regions. Small reductions are beginning to appear, hinting that the market may be reaching a temporary plateau. For buyers, this shift offers a glimpse of relief after a prolonged period of rising costs.


However, the broader picture remains complex. Demand for memory continues to outpace supply, with AI infrastructure consuming a growing share of global DRAM production. Rapid price increases earlier in the year highlighted just how constrained the market has become, leaving little room for immediate correction.


Industry analysts suggest that while prices may stabilise in the short term, a significant drop is unlikely to happen quickly. New production capacity is expected to come online gradually, meaning any meaningful price correction may take time to materialise rather than arriving all at once.


This creates a familiar dilemma for consumers and businesses alike: wait for potential savings or buy now to avoid further volatility. The key question is whether this early cooling signals a lasting shift, or simply a brief pause before demand pushes prices higher again.


Author: Victor Olowomeye


 
 
 

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