In a statement, the company said that the DRAM market would become more favorable to Nanya and other chip providers in the third quarter. It added that the second half would show better market conditions than the first half.
Nanya saw its revenues climb 54 percent compared to last year to a record high of $2.75 billion. Gross margin was 55 percent and operating margin hitting record-high levels of 46 percent. The company credited its positive performance to favourable market conditions, its manufacturing technology upgrades and bit shipment growth.
DRAM costs have come down substantially, but the three DRAM manufacturers have been curbing their production to prevent prices from falling further.
A report from Trendforce, earlier this year said that memory manufacturers are slowing production to offset the steep decline in price. Contract prices fell 10 percent in Q4 2018 and Samsung, Hynix, and Micron are now on track to spend about $18B on DRAM capacity expansions in 2019.
That’s a decrease of 10 percent compared to 2018. Samsung has canceled plans to expand its Pyeongtaek facility. Overall, it looks as though capacity will increase by ~20 percent next year, which is one of the smallest year-on-year manufacturing capacity increases on record. Micron is making even more drastic cuts, with only 15 percent expansion predicted. Don’t feel sorry for the DRAMurai, however — gross margins for Samsung and Hynix remain ~80 percent, while Micron is still above 60 percent. The three firms will attempt to avoid competing dramatically with each other on price by cutting capacity expansion rather than aggressively competing to gain market share at the expense of the other.