The AI boom has created an unlikely group of winners: memory chip manufacturers. While everyone obsesses over Nvidia (NVDA) and its graphics processors, the companies making the memory that keeps AI systems running are quietly printing money.
Micron Technology Inc. (MU), Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. (SSNLF), and SK Hynix are leading a powerful rally in semiconductor stocks as artificial intelligence demand creates a supply crunch across the global memory market. Micron's stock has skyrocketed over 242% in the last 12 months, a reflection of just how optimistic investors are about chips that power AI systems.
Here's the basic story: memory sits at the heart of AI computing. The chips used to train and run models from companies like Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) rely heavily on high-performance memory. As Big Tech pours billions into AI data centers, supply remains painfully tight.
South Korea's top memory producers are posting impressive gains in 2026. SK Hynix is up around 11.5%, Samsung Electronics has advanced nearly 16% year-to-date, and Micron has climbed about 16.3% over the same period.
The pressure is most visible in DRAM, a key memory component used in AI servers. DRAM prices surged throughout 2025 and are expected to rise another 40% through the second quarter of 2026, according to Counterpoint Research. Analysts say memory, not logic chips, is driving the latest semiconductor rally.
Supply Shortages Give Manufacturers Serious Leverage
This supply-demand imbalance is giving memory giants significant pricing power, and they're not being shy about using it.
Samsung has raised prices on key memory chips by as much as 60% since September, capitalizing on tight supply and panic ordering from customers scrambling to secure inventory. The company even delayed its usual pricing update before rolling out the hikes, a sign of just how much control it has right now.
The AI-driven shortage is pushing up costs for server makers and could eventually raise prices for consumer electronics like smartphones and PCs. Panic buying has rippled across the supply chain, forcing some customers to delay purchases of other semiconductor components. For Samsung, higher prices are strengthening its earnings outlook considerably.
The company's rivals are benefitting from similar dynamics, but SK Hynix might have the most enviable position of all.
SK Hynix Completely Sold Out, Micron Bets Big on U.S. Manufacturing
SK Hynix says surging AI demand has pushed it into a full-blown memory supercycle. The kicker? Its entire chip supply for next year is already sold out.
The company plans to begin shipping next-generation HBM4 chips in the fourth quarter and has secured customer orders for all of its DRAM, HBM, and NAND production through 2026. SK Hynix also disclosed a letter of intent to supply memory to OpenAI, highlighting its deepening role in the AI ecosystem.
To keep pace with demand, the company plans to significantly boost capital spending next year, even as trade restrictions add pressure to its China operations.
Meanwhile, Micron is investing aggressively to capture long-term AI-driven growth. The company will break ground in January 2026 on a massive New York megafab. The campus could eventually house up to four fabs, making it the largest semiconductor facility in the U.S.
Micron says the expansion positions it to meet surging AI memory demand while reinforcing its status as the only U.S.-based memory chip manufacturer. It's a big bet that this isn't just a temporary spike, but a fundamental shift in how much memory the world needs.
MU Price Action: Micron Technology shares were down 0.33% at $338.42 at the time of publication on Thursday.




