Weak Demand for Consumer Electronics and Inventory Clearance
Since the fourth quarter of last year, storage manufacturers have forcibly driven up prices by controlling production capacity utilization rates. However, this supply-driven price increase has not been supported by a substantial recovery in consumer demand (PCs and mobile devices). Price fluctuations in the Huaqiangbei market often serve as a global spot market indicator. This time, a 30% price drop for 32GB products within a week reflects the retail channel's limited capacity to absorb high-premium products. Some consumers are turning to lower-capacity versions or the second-hand market, causing channel inventory turnover rates to plummet.
Supply Chain Transmission and Spot-Contract Price Gap
Upstream, major original manufacturers like Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix are maintaining stable or rising contract prices for large OEM manufacturers. However, the dramatic retracement in the spot market is exerting pressure on future contract price increases. When spot prices fall significantly below contract prices, end-device manufacturers may alter their purchasing strategies, forcing original manufacturers to reassess their pricing logic for the second quarter.
Competitive Dynamics and Speculative Trade
Liu Ankun from Rongtong Fund believes that the main reason for this round of price cuts is the collapse of psychological defenses in the midstream sector. Many distributors previously speculating on price differences are now reducing prices sharply to avoid the risk of inventory devaluation after observing weak upward momentum in spot prices. This “stampede” in sales has further intensified market hesitation, leading the consumer-grade storage market into a cycle of "the more prices drop, the less people buy."




