The world is about to run short on RAM. According to Nikkei Asia, memory makers are only expected to meet 60 percent of demand by the end of 2027. The SK Group chairman has floated the possibility that shortages persist all the way to 2030.
To keep pace with demand, production would need to grow by 12 percent a year across 2026 and 2027. What is actually planned, according to Counterpoint Research, is 7.5 percent. Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron are all building new fabs, but almost none of that capacity comes online before 2027 at the earliest. SK opened one facility in Cheongju back in February, and that is it for new production among the big three this year.
The reason demand is so brutal right now is AI. Every large language model, every inference cluster, every data centre buildout is consuming memory at a pace nobody fully anticipated two years ago. So while consumer tech feels the squeeze, the real pressure point is enterprise and cloud infrastructure.