Posted 10/09/09 at 12:00:56 PM by Paul Lilly
In a change of pace, DDR2 pricing has finally surpassed DDR3, at least on the contract side. According to DRAMeXchange, contract quotes for 2GB DDR2 modules jumped up to an average of $31.50 in the first half of October, a little above DDR3's $31 quote. In addition, 1Gb (gigabit, not gigabyte) DDR2 chips have settled at $1.78, slightly above DDR3 at $1.75.
In the spot market, DRAMeXchange notes that prices for 1Gb DDR2 surged by 5 percent in a single day on October 8, and average quotes for 1Gb DDR2 800MHz chips managed to top the $2 mark at $2.24.
What this all means going forward is anyone's guess in the unpredictable memory market. But it at least appears that DDR3 will become a better bang/buck investment on the consumer side than DDR2. Elpida has already announced plans to increase output of DDR3 chips from 20,000-30,000 up to around 75,000 wafers per month, and Samsung also said it would ramp up production.

Image Credit: TomsHardware
Links:
[1] http://www.maximumpc.com/user/one4yu2c
[2] http://www.maximumpc.com/
[3] http://www.maximumpc.com/article/news/dram_pricing_not_expected_rebound_until_economy_picks_up
[4] http://www.maximumpc.com/article/news/dram_market_worst_its_been_15_years_but_thats_good_you
[5] http://www.maximumpc.com/article/news/dram_contract_prices_remain_static