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Message: NAND flash prices soar on supply fears

NAND flash prices soar on supply fears

Peter Clarke

3/14/2011 11:21 AM EDT


LONDON – The spot price for NAND flash memories jumped by up to 20 percent on Monday (March 14) on fears that supplies could be limited in the aftermath of the earthquake that struck northern Japan on Friday (March 11).

Spot prices jumped on Monday between about 10 and 20 percent, according to the Dramexchange service provided by TrendForce Corp.

Toshiba, the leading maker of NAND flash memory, announced Monday (March 14) that it would close down manufacturing and business sites in response to a request from the Tokyo Electricity and Power Company. However as Toshiba's Yokkaichi fabs are a considerable distance south of Tokyo and even further from the parts of the country worst-affected by the earthquake it is not clear whether these plants will be affected by shutdowns.

In the DRAM spot market most suppliers stopped offering chips due to the uncertainty over the impact of the Japan earthquake. As a result the overall price rose more than 5 percent from early day trading.

While supplies could be constrained, particularly as some fabs may be subject to loss of electricity, so could demand at Japanese consumer electronics companies that use memory chips. As such the dynamic effect on supply and demand is not yet clear, although with so much equipment manufacturing now in China the overall effect is expected to see supply fall behind demand.

If you have information or concerns about particular parts of the global electronics supply chain, please get in touch with EE Times (george.leopold@ubm.com, dylan.mcgrath@ubm.com) or contribute in the forum below.

http://www.eetimes.com/electronics-news/4214009/NAND-flash-memory-prices-soar-on-supply-fears

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