
DRAM Industry Rapidly Recovers in Q3, Market Size Expands Significantly
The global memory market experienced a strong rebound in the third quarter of this year, driven by improved end-user demand and rising prices. DRAM sales increased significantly, with data indicating that the global DRAM market size reached $40.3 billion, marking a substantial growth from the previous quarter. This reflects the industry's gradual return to an expansion cycle after enduring a prolonged inventory adjustment.
Industry analysts point out that with the increased demand for AI servers, smartphones, and high-performance computing, the average selling prices of DRAM products have continued to rise, resulting in significant profits for major manufacturers. Capacity management and technological upgrades on the supply side have further strengthened the momentum of this recovery.
SK Hynix Remains Global Leader for Three Consecutive Quarters, Market Advantage Continues to Expand
According to research agency statistics, SK Hynix maintained its leading position in the global DRAM market this quarter, with a market share exceeding 34%. Although slightly reduced from the previous quarter, it still firmly holds the industry’s top position. The company further solidifies its competitiveness in high-end product lines with its technological edge in HBM (High Bandwidth Memory) and server-grade DRAM.
Analysts note that as the AI training and inference market grows explosively, demand for high-spec memory like HBM is rising, with SK Hynix, as a major supplier in this field, benefiting most significantly. The market anticipates that the company will maintain its leading position over the coming quarters.
Samsung Electronics Narrows the Gap, Actively Adjusts Product Portfolio
Samsung Electronics followed closely with a market share of approximately 33.7% this quarter, slightly up from the previous quarter. Although still in second place, the gap between the two has further narrowed. In recent years, Samsung has actively adjusted its capacity structure, increased the proportion of high-end DRAM products, and advanced the mass production of cutting-edge process nodes to enhance its competitiveness in the high-value-added market.
The industry notes that Samsung has a broad customer base in the smartphone and storage server fields. Combined with its advantage in large-scale production, it shows strong resilience when the industry's economy recovers. As it accelerates the deployment of HBM products, it is expected to further capture high-end market share.
Micron Holds Third Place, Supply Chain Strategies Support Stable Growth
U.S. company Micron Technology maintained its third position globally this quarter with a DRAM market share of about 26%. Although there is a certain gap compared to the two Korean giants, it still shows stable penetration in data centers, laptops, and consumer electronics.
In recent years, Micron has continuously optimized its product structure, advancing the mass production of LPDDR and DDR5 new products, and strengthening cooperation with North American server manufacturers to expand its share in the high-performance application market.
Price Rebound Key to Growth This Quarter, Industry Boom Significantly Improves
Industry organizations state that this quarter's increase in DRAM sales was primarily driven by rising prices. Following widespread capacity reductions by manufacturers and gradually recovering demand, inventory levels fell rapidly. Against this background, DRAM prices, after multiple quarters of decline, finally showed an upward trend.
With strong growth in AI servers and signs of a rebound in the PC market, DRAM demand is expected to remain stable in the future.
Market Structure Changes Accelerate, DRAM Competition to Become More Intense
Overall, the global DRAM market showed a strong recovery in the third quarter. SK Hynix continues to lead, Samsung follows closely, and Micron maintains steady growth. Looking ahead, as AI technology continues to drive high-end memory demand, the three major manufacturers will engage in more intense competition in terms of technological paths, capacity planning, and high-end product supply.

