Memory Chipmakers Hit $1 Trillion as AI Servers Reshape Chip Economics
Source: SiliconANGLE
Micron and SK Hynix crossing the trillion-dollar threshold reflects a reordering of semiconductor value. AI inference and training workloads demand vastly more DRAM and high-bandwidth memory than traditional computing, making memory the limiting factor in data center buildouts rather than processors. The valuation milestone indicates that the memory shortage constraining AI deployment is now creating pricing power for suppliers, shifting margin concentration away from fabless chip designers toward the commodity producers who control physical capacity. South Korean and American memory makers are now worth more than legacy Intel, intensifying dependence on non-U.S. suppliers for critical AI infrastructure.