Contract memory foundry work, UMC’s stock price rises 30% in five days! The industry warns of a “three-short” bottleneck: short-term risks of getting stuck

ChainNewsAbmedia

The ongoing 2D NAND flash memory supply shortage crisis continues to worsen, and reports from the market suggest that United Microelectronics (2303) may take over SLC and MLC Flash foundry wafer orders. The news has driven the stock price up nearly 30% in just five trading days. However, industry insiders told 《DIGITIMES》 that United Microelectronics faces a “three shortages” predicament—talent, technology, and equipment—and may run into a bottleneck in the short term.

2D NAND faces a severe shortage—could United Microelectronics take over foundry orders?

As Samsung (Samsung), Kioxia (Kioxia), and other international memory giants have successively shifted resources and concentrated them on 3D NAND, the supply gap for 2D NAND has quickly widened. This has pushed up prices of older SLC and MLC NAND process products at a rapid pace; the price increases for some SKUs are nearly tenfold, with the growth rate outpacing DRAM. Downstream players also revealed that MLC NAND quotations have been raised by 30% since just April.

(Memory price rally cooling off? Institutions estimate the Q2 increase narrows to 30%, and further cools in the second half)

Against this backdrop, the industry has begun seeking alternative supply sources. Taiwan’s leading semiconductor foundry company, United Microelectronics, has become a “memory-themed stock” that the market is chasing, because it has some idle production capacity. Outside reports further say that some Asian customers have proactively contacted United Microelectronics to explore the possibility of taking on SLC and MLC Flash foundry wafer production.

United Microelectronics (2303) stock closed today at $76.90, up 27.11% over five days

As the rumors spread rapidly, United Microelectronics’ stock price surged more than 27% within five trading days; however, a United Microelectronics spokesperson did not respond to this.

United Microelectronics faces three major gaps—“talent, technology, and equipment”—and the industry admits: no solution in the short term

However, multiple industry insiders privately told 《DIGITIMES》 that United Microelectronics’ prospects of moving into 2D NAND foundry work are far more difficult than the market imagines.

Talent gap: 2D NAND engineers have “left the building”

First, most of the veteran engineers who were responsible for tuning 2D NAND process equipment have either retired or left. Those who remain have all been transferred to 3D NAND mass production positions. At present, NAND makers are fully racing to develop 3D NAND in order to capture the AI server market; manpower has long been stretched thin, leaving no slack to provide technical team support for migrating 2D NAND processes.

Technical capability: United Microelectronics’ memory development capability shows a serious gap

Next, although United Microelectronics carried out memory-related R&D years ago, its core technical direction has long shifted away from the memory field. Re-entering would not only require large-scale resources; rebuilding capabilities for yield optimization and process tuning would also take a considerable amount of time. If United Microelectronics can only provide production capacity but cannot support process development for customers on its own, its actual contribution to profits would be quite limited.

Equipment acquisition: older-generation equipment is almost impossible to obtain

Finally, when major manufacturers upgrade to 3D NAND production lines, older-generation equipment has already been sold off or dismantled. The secondhand market is almost unable to find what is needed; even if equipment can be found, it is equally difficult to get maintenance parts and technical personnel. Kioxia previously also said publicly that shutting down 2D NAND production was not due to AI capacity crowding it out; rather, it was due to severely aged old equipment, excessively high maintenance costs, and related issues.

If United Microelectronics chooses to purchase entirely new equipment to rebuild the production line, it is estimated to take one to two years, and the yield-rebuilding process is full of uncertainty—meaning the investment payback risk is extremely high.

United Microelectronics adjusts wafer price upward; the 8-inch line could see an increase of up to 15% in the second half

In addition, United Microelectronics has recently officially issued price-increase notices to customers and business partners, confirming that it will raise wafer foundry quotation starting in the second half of 2026. The company said that, starting from the first half of 2026, demand across multiple application areas—including communications, industrial, consumer electronics, and AI-related fields—will continue to be strong. Combined with comprehensive increases in raw material, energy, and logistics costs, it is indeed necessary to raise prices.

Supply-chain players said that both the 8-inch and 12-inch product lines are within the scope of this round of price increases. Based on a production cycle of about 3.5 months, April orders will be the first to apply the new prices: the 8-inch wafer production line has a relatively higher increase of about 10% to 15%; the 12-inch production line (including processes such as 80nm, 55nm, 40nm) has an estimated increase of about 5% to 10%, and the increases will be implemented in tiers according to each customer’s shipment volumes.

Industry observers noted that this round of price hikes is mainly intended to make up for the profit shortfall caused by past price cuts in mature processes. IC customers with long-term contracts (LTA) are less affected, and the increase is expected to be gradually passed on to downstream customers.

The gap between market expectations and reality: near-term risks should not be ignored

Now, although United Microelectronics’ idea of taking on 2D NAND foundry work looks promising, the three major obstacles—talent gap, technical gap, and equipment shortages—are all intertwined. In the short term, it may end up running into a bottleneck. In a market environment where the supply gap continues to expand and quotations continue to rise, United Microelectronics’ rapid stock surge reflects more the market’s enthusiasm for the theme than changes in fundamentals.

Chain-news reminds investors that when following volatile themes such as memory, they still need to prudently assess the risk of the gap between expectations and reality.

This article: Taking over memory foundry—United Microelectronics’ stock jumps 30% in five days! Industry warns of a “three-shortage” bottleneck: likely to get stuck in the short term; earliest appears at Chain News ABMedia.

Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

BlackRock IBIT Adds 3,355 BTC in $256M Institutional Inflow on April 20

IBIT led Bitcoin ETF inflows with $256M (≈3,355 BTC) on Apr 20, pushing total spot-ETF inflows near $58B and assets over $100B, underscoring rising institutional demand and access via regulated ETFs. Abstract: This report notes that BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) attracted $256 million in net inflows on April 20, about 3,355 BTC, signaling robust institutional interest in Bitcoin spot ETFs. IBIT dominated daily flows, with Bitcoin ETF inflows totaling over $238 million for the day and cumulative spot ETF inflows approaching $58 billion; overall spot Bitcoin ETF assets exceed $100 billion, representing more than 6% of Bitcoin's market cap. The trend suggests growing institutional confidence in Bitcoin as a long-term asset, aided by regulated access and simplified custody; IBIT remains the leading issuer, though Fidelity and ARK Invest are also attracting capital.

GateNews16m ago

Qualcomm CEO Meets Samsung, SK Hynix, LG on Memory Supply and AI Partnerships

Gate News message, April 21 — Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon recently met with executives from Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, and LG Electronics to discuss memory supply, chip manufacturing, and AI partnerships. The talks centered on addressing Qualcomm's tight LPDDR memory supply as demand for AI

GateNews16m ago

Wantai Biotech Posts First Annual Loss Since IPO as Nine-Valent HPV Vaccine Fails to Offset Declining Revenue

Gate News message, April 21 — Wantai Biotech (603392) reported its first annual loss since listing in 2020, with 2025 net loss attributable to parent company reaching 398 million yuan (approximately $55 million), while revenue declined 18.99% year-over-year to 1.819 billion yuan. The company attribu

GateNews26m ago

SpaceX IPO Filing Reveals $1.75 Trillion Valuation, Musk to Retain Control via Class B Shares

Gate News message, April 21 — SpaceX's confidential IPO filing disclosed that Elon Musk will retain control of the company through Class B shares, each carrying 10 votes, while seeking a $1.75 trillion valuation in a $75 billion offering. Musk will remain chief executive, chief technical officer, a

GateNews36m ago

South Korea's Semiconductor Exports Surge 182.5% in Early April on AI Chip Demand

AI demand boosted Korea's semiconductor exports and profits for Samsung and SK hynix; shipments to China and the US rose. Yet policy risks from U.S. tariffs loom despite a record 2025 level. Abstract: The article reports that South Korea's semiconductor exports surged in early April, driven by AI-related demand that increased memory-chip shipments and profits for Samsung Electronics and SK hynix. Exports rose to US$18.3 billion in April 1–20, with total exports up 49.4% to US$50.4 billion and a US$10.4 billion trade surplus. China and the United States were primary growth markets, and 2025 semiconductor exports reached a record US$173.4 billion, up over 20% year over year. However, policy uncertainties persist: a 25% U.S. tariff on certain advanced computing chips could affect sentiment, memory-chip exports being excluded, and tensions in the Middle East and broader tariff policies could weigh on the outlook.

GateNews56m ago

HYBE Founder Park Si-hoo Faces Arrest Request Over Alleged IPO Fraud

Gate News message, April 21 — South Korean authorities requested the arrest of Park Si-hoo, founder and chairman of entertainment company HYBE, on suspicion of fraud in connection with the company's initial public offering (IPO). According to multiple reports, Park allegedly told early investors in

GateNews1h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments