Micron CEO expects memory shortages to stretch beyond 2027 as AI spending surges

Skye Jacobs

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Big quote: Micron Technology is telling investors that memory supply is under pressure and is likely to remain so, largely due to the rapid build-out of AI data centers. In its fiscal third-quarter 2026 earnings report, the company said memory demand is outpacing supply. Micron, a major producer of DRAM and NAND, linked this imbalance directly to artificial intelligence.

"We expect tight conditions to persist beyond calendar 2027 as a result of AI-driven demand across all segments coupled with structural supply constraints," CEO Sanjay Mehrotra said in the report.

His comments point to a shift in how memory is being used. Modern AI systems – especially those used to train large models and run inference across many users – require far more bandwidth and capacity than typical applications. That demand is concentrated in large cloud data centers but is also beginning to appear in enterprise systems.

Increasing supply is also difficult. Building and upgrading memory fabs takes years and significant capital, and newer process nodes add further complexity. Even with heavy investment, production is still lagging behind demand.

Those pressures have already shown up in pricing. System RAM, graphics memory, and SSDs have all become more expensive, largely because AI data centers are competing for the same supply.

Micron has also shifted its business strategy. In late 2025, it announced it would exit the consumer market and wind down its Crucial-branded SSDs and RAM kits. That move allows the company to focus more on AI and data-center customers, which purchase in larger volumes and pay for higher-end components.

That pressure is now visible further down the supply chain. Hardware makers that rely on memory are paying more for components, and those costs are filtering through to retail prices. Gaming PCs and pre-built systems, which require large amounts of RAM and storage, are among the most affected.

In some instances, sticker prices have ended up far above early expectations. Systems that were expected to land at more affordable price points have shipped at significantly higher costs, largely due to rising component prices. Memory has become one of the biggest swing factors.

Looking ahead, Micron does not see a quick fix. The company expects supply conditions to improve around 2028 but still has no clear visibility on when supply will fully catch up with demand.

"Even as we expect industry supply to improve gradually in 2028, we currently do not have line of sight as to when memory supply will be able to catch up with increasing demand," Mehrotra said.

That lack of clarity makes planning more difficult for hardware makers. Companies building next-generation systems – including future game consoles – must budget for memory prices that can fluctuate significantly. As AI features spread into more consumer devices, performance requirements rise, and so does the cost of the memory needed to meet them.

For now, the story remains unchanged: AI is driving a surge in memory demand across the industry. Until supply expands enough to match it, memory will remain a key bottleneck.

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They benefit from the demand, so from a strategic perspective they will be hoping this continues for quite a while, and abandoning personal computing entirely conveys their level of confidence that it will.

Eventually they'll probably return as an also-ran when the market shifts again and a new shiny toy comes along.

We also live in a world with so many video games that you could buy a 30 year old console from ebay and spend the rest of your life gaming on that one system.

Interesting times.
 
The upwards pressure will persist as long as the government money pushes it, which it was a 4 year bill to spend $500 billion starting in 2025. Unless the supply side drastically increases production, which only seems to be getting done by CXMT, the high prices will continue burying all tech products that require RAM and NAND.
 
Never trust what the CEO of a company that abandoned the personal consumer market for quick profit says ever. AI bubble will burst at some point, when the biggest 2 (maybe 3 ?) companies will win the AI race and everyone else dies.
 
Never trust what the CEO of a company that abandoned the personal consumer market for quick profit says ever. AI bubble will burst at some point, when the biggest 2 (maybe 3 ?) companies will win the AI race and everyone else dies.
You've obviously never run a business, but try for a moment to imagine how it works.
So you'll refuse to sell to big customers paying higher prices, and will heroically stick to the personal consumer market? Really?

Nobody with 2+ brain cells will do that.
Wokism and virtue signaling are always done at somebody else's expense.
 
Why would you have to refuse to sell to both AI companies, and the PC market?
Abandoning the PC market is saying no to more money, which makes no business sense.
And when the AI bubble pops, Micron will have to come crawling back to the consumer market.
Then again, Micron took taxpayer funding to build new fabs which will only make AI memory,another slap on the face after ditching the consumer market.
 
Why would you have to refuse to sell to both AI companies, and the PC market?
Abandoning the PC market is saying no to more money, which makes no business sense.
And when the AI bubble pops, Micron will have to come crawling back to the consumer market.
Then again, Micron took taxpayer funding to build new fabs which will only make AI memory,another slap on the face after ditching the consumer market.


You do realize that these companies on only make so much right? This stuff doesn't grow on trees.
 
You do realize that these companies on only make so much right? This stuff doesn't grow on trees.
All of the memory makers had the opportunity to expand before severe shortages, but chose not to because they know it's a bubble and benefit from the shortages.
 
All of the memory makers had the opportunity to expand before severe shortages, but chose not to because they know it's a bubble and benefit from the shortages.
So when these companies lost over $10 billion in 2023, should they have kept investing more money into new fabs while losing money?

Also, they ARE building new fabs. Micron, Samsung, and SK hynix all have new fabs coming online next year. You do realize you cant just set up a fab like its a warehosue right?

Here's the thing, you want this fixed? Like PERMANENTLY fixed? Then go tell the US government to force the Dutch government to force ASML to hand all their tech over to China, so we dont have one company bottlenecking advanced node equipment for the whole world.
 
All of the memory makers had the opportunity to expand before severe shortages, but chose not to because they know it's a bubble and benefit from the shortages.

With the paper thin margins they were making on DRAM and NAND at the time, they were somehow supposed to use the money they weren't making to outbid everyone else for more capacity? How?
 
I’ll take, “how many people commenting on the TechSpot forums don’t understand basic economics” for $1,000 Alex.
 
Here's the thing, you want this fixed? Like PERMANENTLY fixed? Then go tell the US government to force the Dutch government to force ASML to hand all their tech over to China, so we dont have one company bottlenecking advanced node equipment for the whole world.
You don't need at all asml machines to produce ram. China has already tech good enough to produce ram, and they already doing that. And selling this ram to ai buyers
 
My stocks are up 1267% YoY. Thanks AI.

Initial investment was pulled out long ago. And then some. Just keep growing.

While people ramble about crashes, I make dime. When you make free money, you don't care about small price increases for tech.

Imagine trying to downplay the importance of AI, hoping for a crash, because you missed the train.
 
My stocks are up 1267% YoY. Thanks AI.

Initial investment was pulled out long ago. And then some. Just keep growing.

While people ramble about crashes, I make dime. When you make free money, you don't care about small price increases for tech.

Imagine trying to downplay the importance of AI, hoping for a crash, because you missed the train.
Well..........bully for you maestro. LOL...............
 
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