The Latest on Global Memory Shortage: Why Your Next SSD Is MIA

The retail SSD market is vanishing as AI data centers cannibalize the world’s NAND supply. For PC builders, the RAMpocalypse has just hit storage.

If you’re planning a PC build, you might want to adjust your expectations- and your budget. The retail SSD market hasn’t just slowed down; according to Silicon Motion executive Nelson Duann, it has “almost disappeared.”

We’ve officially hit the era where AI is eating the hardware supply chain. Because AI data centers and hyperscalers have an insatiable, high-margin appetite for NAND flash, memory manufacturers have effectively stopped prioritizing consumer channels. The result is a supply bottleneck that ripples all the way down to the individual PC builder.

The shift is structural: PC manufacturers (OEMs like Dell and HP) can no longer secure enough NAND directly from the source, so they’re swooping in to buy finished drives from module makers. These module makers are now redirecting a chunk of their output to fill OEM contracts.

It’s a safer, more predictable business model for them. And for the end user, it means fewer options, higher prices, and a retail market that’s being hollowed out from the inside.

That is a consequence of the AI-driven gold rush. When silicon becomes more valuable than gold, the retail market is always the first casualty. We’re living in a world where consumer convenience is being sacrificed to feed the massive server farms powering the next generation of LLMs.

Look elsewhere if you were hoping for a dip in prices. The era of walking into a store or jumping on Newegg to grab a cheap, high-capacity drive is effectively over. We are all just bottom-feeders in the shadow of the AI giants now.

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