A Samsung factory strike may push DRAM and NAND prices even higher

DragonSlayer101

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Ripple effect: With negotiations stalling between Samsung's labor union and management, the proposed 18-day strike at the company's Pyeongtaek and Hwaseong factories appears inevitable. Consumers and electronics manufacturers are already reeling from the ongoing memory crunch and the resulting price hikes, and industry insiders fear that a strike could further disrupt the global supply chain, exacerbating the memory crisis.

According to industry observers and supply chain experts cited by South Korean media outlets News1 and Dong-A Ilbo, the proposed strike at Samsung's Pyeongtaek and Hwaseong factories could cut global DRAM supply by 3-4% and NAND flash supply by 2-3%. Employees affiliated with the National Samsung Electronics Union already reduced wafer transfer volume from the night shift on April 23, just hours after the union announced that it plans to go ahead with the proposed strike.

Sources say production in Samsung's foundry division fell by about 58.1% after the strike was announced, while the Giheung S1 line registered a 74.3% drop in total output. The memory business was relatively less affected, registering an 18.4% overall decline, but most of the production cutbacks were reportedly in the consumer DRAM sector, with things expected to get worse if the strike materializes.

The strike would be bad news for Samsung, with the company estimated to incur losses of 20-30 trillion won ($13-20 billion) if it lasts for the full 18 days. It would also mean a 36-day production blackout, with post-strike recovery estimated to take at least 2-3 weeks. According to supply chain experts, engineers will utilize the recovery period to do a full cleanroom reset and tool recalibration before ramping up yield.

The Samsung Group's umbrella trade union reiterated last week that it will proceed with the proposed 18-day general strike from May 21 through June 7 if the company does not meet its demands. At the heart of the dispute is the union's demand that the company distribute 15% of its profits to employees as bonuses, citing record earnings generated by the AI memory boom. The union is also demanding the removal of the existing cap on performance-based bonuses, which limits bonus payouts to 50% of annual salary.

The demands are partially driven by the massive bonuses being paid by fellow South Korean semiconductor firm SK Hynix. According to reports, the company has agreed to pay around 700 million won (about $477,000) per employee in performance-based bonuses from windfall profits generated by the AI boom. With the AI chip supercycle expected to continue into 2027, those bonuses could rise to roughly $900,000 next year.

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Fire the people. Use robots. The future is now.

The more humans cause trouble for companies , the chance of being fired goes up and they will look more and more towards AI and robots, which don't need sleep, food or ask for a raise. They don't make mistakes either.

Fully automatic factories are already running today. In some years, humans will be replaced entirely in many areas.
 
Fire the people. Use robots. The future is now.

The more humans cause trouble for companies , the chance of being fired goes up and they will look more and more towards AI and robots, which don't need sleep, food or ask for a raise. They don't make mistakes either.

Fully automatic factories are already running today. In some years, humans will be replaced entirely in many areas.
And now you have to stop the entire factory every time a change is made, because robots are not flexible.

Oh, and robots aint gonna buy your products.
 
Ultimately, if this strike actually happens, the strikers will get nothing, the end consumers will pay the price increases due to the exacerbated shortage, and Samsung and its shareholders will line their pockets even more. So why would Samsung bother paying compensation when it can just stay in their own pockets?
 
Fire the people. Use robots. The future is now.

The more humans cause trouble for companies , the chance of being fired goes up and they will look more and more towards AI and robots, which don't need sleep, food or ask for a raise. They don't make mistakes either.

Fully automatic factories are already running today. In some years, humans will be replaced entirely in many areas.
If humans don't have income how will companies make money by selling things? Will they sell their memory to the robots?
 
If humans don't have income how will companies make money by selling things? Will they sell their memory to the robots?
Well, since millennials and zoomers are having dogs and cats instead of kids and refuse to speak with opposite sex, I think the problem of unemployed “useless” people is gonna get obsolete in a couple of decades. :D

But on a serious note, declining demographics that I joke about will soften negatives from AI automation for NA, EU and APAC. But think what’s gonna be with undeveloped countries and all those countless immigrants from your Gucci’s Burma factory? Another great barbarian invasion to topple down The Rome)
 
These guys are asking for a $400k USD bonus as opposed to the $264k Samsung is offering. SK Hynix is giving employees the same amount, 10% of its profits, but Samsung is barely half as profitable per employee so the union is getting really greedy at your expense.

Personally if I worked for Samsung's memory business, I would not participate in that strike. They're getting the offer of a lifetime and they're asking for 50% on top of that lol.
 
Fire the people. Use robots. The future is now.

The more humans cause trouble for companies , the chance of being fired goes up and they will look more and more towards AI and robots, which don't need sleep, food or ask for a raise. They don't make mistakes either.

Fully automatic factories are already running today. In some years, humans will be replaced entirely in many areas.
Yes, start from the top too. The bosses cause the most trouble for everyone. AI can and should delete every single CEO. Period.
 
And now you have to stop the entire factory every time a change is made, because robots are not flexible.

Oh, and robots aint gonna buy your products.
You can't have seen a modern factory. Humans pretty much do nothing in most cases anyway. They do QC and packing.
 
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If humans don't have income how will companies make money by selling things? Will they sell their memory to the robots?
Humans can have plenty of income if you are smart about it. I began investing heavily in crypto and tech 10 years ago. I earn 8-10 times more today, doing nothing, than when I worked.

While people raged about price increases and hoped AI "bubble" to burst, I took home huge earnings many times yearly. Many people did. This is the reason expensive hardware still sell about instantly. For many people, those prices are not high.

Work smarter, not harder.
 
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