Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Supercycle”
DRAM and NAND: The Memory Supercycle Is Just Beginning, With No End in Sight
The memory industry spent thirty years teaching investors one lesson: never believe “this time is different.” Boom, over-invest, glut, collapse. Price the top early, because the top always comes. That instinct is now the most expensive mistake in semiconductors. The DRAM and NAND supercycle that began in 2024 is not late-cycle. It is early. And the mechanism that has ended every prior memory cycle has been disabled.
The demand is structural, not cyclical
Start with the numbers, because they are not subtle. IDC puts DRAM revenue at $418.6 billion in 2026, up roughly 177 percent year over year, with total memory rising from $226 billion in 2025 to $594.7 billion in 2026 and $790.4 billion in 2027. Bank of America frames the period as a supercycle on the scale of the 1990s boom, with DRAM revenue up 51 percent and NAND up 45 percent. Contract prices through early 2026 rose 90 to 95 percent quarter over quarter. DDR5 spot prices quadrupled from September 2025. Supplier inventories sit at two to four weeks.