from DRAMeXchange--a few days old but still very relevant.
  DRAM Prices to Continue Rising in 4Q25,  Server Demand Surges Ahead While Legacy Process Products See Steeper  Increases, Says TrendForce
   Published             Sep.24 2025,15:14 PM (GMT+8)
  TrendForce’s latest investigations reveal that the three major DRAM  suppliers continue to allocate advanced process capacity primarily to  high-end server DRAM and HBM, crowding out capacity for PC, mobile, and  consumer applications. Combined with diverging demand across end  products, this dynamic is keeping legacy-process DRAM price hikes  pronounced, while newer-generation products are seeing more modest  gains. Overall, conventional DRAM prices are expected to rise 8–13% QoQ  in 4Q25, and when HBM is included, the increase could widen to 13-18%.
    PC DRAM prices edge up slightly, U.S. CSPs consider early server DRAM procurement
    Shipments of finished PCs are projected to decline with PC promotions  and restocking momentum slowing in 4Q25, leading major OEMs to cut DRAM  bit procurement. Meanwhile, as the three suppliers aggressively shift  capacity toward server DDR5, the supply of both PC DDR5 and DDR4 remains  constrained. As a result, PC DRAM prices are forecast to continue  edging upward through the quarter.
    Server DRAM demand is benefiting from recovering build-out momentum  among CSPs, with DDR5 products in particular seeing sustained strength.  Both U.S. and CSPs are projected to sharply increase procurement in  2026. Some U.S. CSPs, seeking to secure adequate supply, are even  planning to begin procurement as early as 4Q25, adopting a more flexible  stance on pricing.
    Despite suppliers’ active capacity adjustments, several uncertainties  remain—technical issues at certain vendors, as well as suppliers’ plans  to prioritize HBM4 capacity in 1H26—leaving DDR5 supply conditions  unsettled. Prices are therefore expected to remain on an upward  trajectory in 4Q25. Additionally, while some suppliers have extended  DDR4 production for specific clients, robust demand is sustaining  significant price hikes for DDR4 as well.
    Mobile DRAM prices rising, graphics DRAM demand holds, consumer DRAM growth moderates
    LPDDR4X—used in mid- and low-end smartphones—is seeing supply  continue to shrink as suppliers cut bit output. Brands have stepped up  procurement to avoid supply disruptions, exacerbating the imbalance and  pushing LPDDR4X prices to climb more than 10% QoQ in 4Q25. LPDDR5X  adoption is expanding beyond premium smartphones into other device  categories. Although no immediate shortages are apparent, supply  dynamics and pricing strategies suggest that LPDDR5X prices will  continue rising in 4Q25.
    The seasonal PC restocking cycle and anticipation for NVIDIA’s RTX  6000 series are supporting strong pull-in momentum for graphics DRAM,  particularly GDDR7. Suppliers are reinforcing their pricing stance due  to expecting a supply shortage, meaning GDDR7 prices are projected to  rise more sharply than in the prior quarter. Legacy GDDR6, still widely  used in previous-generation GPUs, is maintaining stable demand but faces  constrained supply, leaving GDDR6 prices rising even faster than GDDR7.
    Suppliers remain firm on pricing for consumer DDR4, despite offering  limited supply. However, end-product sales have not shown a strong  rebound, and following near-doubling of DDR4 prices in 3Q25, buyers have  scaled back restocking. Consequently, DDR4 price growth is expected to  moderate in 4Q25. Meanwhile, DDR3 continues to see early procurement  demand. Combined with capacity displacement and rapid inventory  digestion, DDR3 prices are projected to keep climbing.
     
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