U.S. memory giant Micron Technology is dropping a massive $24 billion on a new chip plant in Singapore, turbocharging its fight against a brutal global memory shortage that’s crippling AI builders and gadget makers alike.
Massive Expansion Amid AI Frenzy
This blockbuster investment, announced January 27, 2026, targets a sprawling 700,000-square-foot cleanroom for advanced wafer fabrication. Output kicks off in late 2028, zeroing in on NAND flash memory, the lifeblood of AI data centers and high-speed storage.
Singapore already cranks out 98% of Micron’s flash chips, and this joins a $7 billion high-bandwidth memory (HBM) packaging plant slated for 2027 production.
It’s a strategic masterstroke as AI inference explodes, with cloud giants like those in North America snapping up gear for the AI agent surge.
Shortage Bites Hard, Prices Soar
The crunch is real: analysts at TrendForce peg enterprise SSD contract prices jumping 55-60% as demand laps supply through late 2027. Micron held 13% of the flash market in Q3 2025, trailing leaders like Samsung and SK Hynix.
Last week, Micron said
It was in talks to buy a fabrication site from Powerchip (6770.TW), opening a new tab in Taiwan, for $1.8 billion in cash, that it said would boost its output of DRAM wafers.
Strategic Edge and Road Ahead
Micron’s Singapore pivot dodges U.S.-China tensions while locking in Asia’s manufacturing hub. Artificial Intelligence Market size was valued at $312.41 Million in 2024 and is projected to reach $2,414.52 Million by 2032, growing at a CAGR of 33.93% from 2026 to 2032, this positions Micron to grab share from Samsung (43% flash lead) and SK Hynix (28%).
Expect tighter supplies pushing margins up for a short-term, but still, Micron’s multi-site push signals a memory renaissance investors, take note.
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