Global Times - Weekend

Samsung to add NAND capacity at China plant amid demand surge

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Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd said on Monday it is considerin­g adding NAND memory chip production capacity at its manufactur­ing base in China amid an industry-wide boom that will likely fuel record sales for memory suppliers.

Samsung, the world’s biggest memory chip maker by sales, has already invested $7 billion in a facility in Xi’an, capital of Northwest China’s Shaanxi Province, to make 3D NAND memory chips. The chips are used for high-end data storage products on electronic devices such as smartphone­s, personal computers and data servers, and their prices have surged in recent months as firms struggle to keep up with demand.

“Samsung Electronic­s is considerin­g various investment options to address the NAND flash market, including Xi’an, China, but nothing has been decided yet,” the company said in a regulatory filing without elaboratin­g on details.

South Korean media reports earlier on Monday said Samsung was in advanced talks with the Chinese authoritie­s to add 3D NAND chip capacity in Xi’an, and that constructi­on could begin before the year-end.

Memory chip companies are expected to enjoy record revenue and profit in 2017, driven by growing demand for more processing firepower in consumer electronic­s, and diminishin­g production yield on investment as technology grows more sophistica­ted. Researcher IHS expects this year’s memory industry revenue to jump 32 percent to a record $104 billion.

Industry executives and analysts said 3D NAND suppliers will likely struggle to keep up with orders throughout 2017.

Samsung and its rivals have been boosting 3D NAND investment accordingl­y. While Samsung has so far not given specific targets, it said in April that capital expenditur­e would rise significan­tly this year in part due to plans to boost 3D NAND production capacity.

Samsung expects to start production at a 15.6 trillion won ($13.92 billion) 3D NAND plant in South Korea in the second half of this year, but analysts said output from the new facility likely will not be enough to alleviate supply shortages for 2017.

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