From Shortage to Strategy: Managing DDR4, DDR5 and HBM Supply Challenges

It is no exaggeration in saying that the global memory chip market is experiencing significant disruption, with multiple DRAM categories under sustained pressure. What makes the current situation particularly challenging is that constraints are not isolated they are occurring simultaneously across both legacy and next-generation memory technologies.

From DDR4 shortages driven by supplier exits to DDR5 demand being pulled by AI infrastructure, the market is facing a perfect storm of reduced supply, shifting demand, and aggressive pricing increases.

For OEMs, EMS providers, and high-reliability sectors, this is a serious operational challenge.

Where are the bottlenecks?

DDR4 & LPDDR4: Structural Supply Reduction

DDR4 and LPDDR4 are currently among the most constrained memory categories. A major contributing factor is the exit of leading DRAM manufacturers from these nodes, significantly reducing global production capacity.

With fewer suppliers and limited new investment in these technologies, allocation has tightened, leaving many organisations struggling to secure consistent supply.

DDR5 & LPDDR5: AI is consuming capacity

While newer technologies like DDR5 and LPDDR5 are still in production, they are far from immune to disruption. Demand has surged due to the rapid expansion of AI-driven infrastructure, including:

  • High-performance computing platforms
  • Data centres supporting AI workloads
  • DDR5 RDIMM demand linked to server growth

This shift is absorbing a disproportionate share of manufacturing capacity, leaving other sectors competing for limited availability.

DDR3: Unexpected Pressure from Substitution

DDR3 is experiencing renewed pressure not just from legacy demand, but from substitution trends.

As LPDDR4 availability tightens, some consumer and industrial applications are shifting back to DDR3L as an alternative. At the same time, manufacturers are prioritising DDR4 output, further restricting DDR3 supply.

Legacy Memory: Stable, but Fragile

Older memory technologies such as SDRAM, DDR1, and DDR2 are currently stable in terms of supply and pricing.

However, this stability is deceptive. These categories rely on a shrinking pool of manufacturers, and any decision to discontinue or rationalise product lines could quickly disrupt availability.

The implications are clear

  • Longer lead times are becoming the norm
  • Allocation-based supply is limiting flexibility
  • Cost pressures are impacting project viability
  • Obsolescence risk is increasing for long-life programmes

For industries where product lifecycles extend well beyond standard semiconductor roadmaps such as aerospace, defence, industrial, and automotive. This creates a significant challenge.

Solution: Recover, Reuse, and De-Risk Supply

Retronix provides a practical, immediate solution. By enabling component recovery and reuse from existing assets, Retronix helps organisations:

  • Unlock value from surplus or stranded inventory
  • Recover memory devices from PCBs for reuse
  • Maintain continuity without waiting for new supply
  • Reduce exposure to price volatility and allocation constraints

All recovered components undergo controlled, certified processes to ensure reliability and performance, making them suitable for use in high-reliability and mission-critical applications.

This approach not only addresses short-term shortages but also supports long-term obsolescence management and sustainability goals.

Don’t let market volatility dictate your future. Discover the hidden potential within your own operations. Retronix is uniquely positioned to help you turn scarcity into a strategic advantage, ensuring your production stays robust, resilient, and ready for anything.

Reach out to us today for a ready-made solution by using our contact page or by emailing us at contact@retronix.com.