Guess Who’s Coming to Crash the Memory-Chip Party?

Investors love an oligopoly. Imagine an industry dominated by a few large, long-standing players. They can earn outsized profits in boom times and avoid crashes thanks to rational capital spending. The existential questions, though, are whether these firms might turn on each other, and is the industry’s entry barrier high enough.

Samsung Electronics Co., SK Hynix Inc. and Micron Technology Inc. are thriving in part because of this competitive structure. They own about 90% of the global dynamic random-access memory, or DRAM, market, and are the only suppliers of the high-bandwidth, or HBM, chips that pair with Nvidia Corp.’s graphics processing units. With booming AI demand, the trio is enjoying record profits.

an oligopoly

China is starting to look like the upstart that can disrupt the joyride. ChangXin Memory Technologies Inc., or CXMT, is seeking to raise $9.8 billion in an initial public offering in Shanghai, right on the heels of SK Hynix’s blockbuster $26.5 billion US listing last week. Investors will begin subscribing for shares on Thursday.

CXMT has the momentum. It’s the country’s only viable contender to challenge the oligopoly. Its market share has roughly doubled to 8% from a year ago. Benefiting from worldwide memory shortages — China is hungry, too — the company is getting a boost as the big three divert their capacity to make HBM. In the first half, it is expected to generate up to 120 billion yuan ($17.7 billion) in revenue and 75 billion yuan in net income, a sharp turnaround for a firm that was in the red as recently as mid-2025.

change of fortune

Clearly wary of China’s industrial prowess, analysts have conducted studies on whether CXMT can disrupt the current market makeup. The company is secretive with its ambition, but according to Bloomberg Intelligence, its progress with HBM has reached the engineering stage. But the chipmaker is not able to make these advanced semiconductors at commercial scale yet.