Bankruptcy-Bound Elpida Dethrones Micron from #3 Rank on DRAM Market

From X-bit Labs: In one of the more ironic developments ever to transpire in the dynamic random access memory (DRAM) market, now bankrupt Elpida Memory in the Q1 2012 managed to outperform the overall industry in terms of revenue growth, allowing it to rise one position to take the third rank among global suppliers. The company that Elpida displaced from the third rank was Micron Technology, which is likely to acquire Elpida.

Elpida stepped into third place by grabbing 12.6% market share on the strength of a nearly 1% increase in revenue compared to the fourth quarter of 2011, according to an IHS iSuppli market analysts. While this growth may seem marginal, Elpida outperformed the overall DRAM market, which in the third quarter posted sales of $6.2 billion, down 4.4% from $6.5 billion in Q4 2011. Elpida also surpassed its closest competitor, Micron, whose sales declined by 3% during the same period, causing it to fall one position to fourth place.

“Elpida’s displacement of Micron for the No. 3 spot is paradoxical, especially as Micron on May 7 won the right to bid exclusively to buy the Japanese company, after Hynix Semiconductor and Toshiba Corp. dropped out of the bidding race. Because it would derive the most benefit and has the requisite cash to make a deal, Micron was the most logical choice to purchase Elpida, which filed for bankruptcy in February after incurring more than $5 billion in debt and running up a string of quarterly losses," said Mike Howard, senior principal analyst for DRAM & memory research at IHS.

Micron now must negotiate with Elpida on a number of sensitive issues, including retiring or restructuring the Japanese maker’s massive liabilities. Micron must also figure out what to do with Elpida’s huge facility in Hiroshima, Japan, especially as the strength of the yen renders manufacturing there uncompetitive.

For Micron, which only in the third quarter last year had captured third place after 20 consecutive quarters in the No. 4 spot, the unhappy return to familiar territory was the result of a 16% decline in average selling prices. The drop neutralized the 15% gain in the first quarter that the company achieved with its shipments, causing sales for the only U.S.-based DRAM maker to retreat to $759 million, equivalent to 12.2% share of the market.

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