AI Demand Boosts Global Semiconductor and Memory Markets
- •AI demand fuels 2.6% revenue growth for top global foundries in Q4 2025.
- •Enterprise SSD vendors see 50% revenue surge driven by intensive AI workloads.
- •Rising memory and CPU costs may increase notebook prices by nearly 40% in 2026.
The global semiconductor landscape is undergoing a significant shift as the insatiable demand for AI infrastructure ripples through the supply chain. According to recent market research, the top ten global foundries—the specialized factories that manufacture chips—saw their revenue climb by 2.6% in the final quarter of 2025. This growth is largely credited to the high-performance computing needs of generative AI models, which require massive amounts of specialized hardware to function effectively.
Within the memory sector, the impact of artificial intelligence is even more pronounced. Enterprise SSD (Solid State Drive) vendors reported a staggering 50% quarter-on-quarter revenue increase, with SK Group emerging as a leader in this space. These storage devices are essential for the intensive data-shuffling required during the training of large-scale models. As data centers expand to accommodate these workloads, the demand for high-capacity, high-speed storage has outpaced traditional market expectations.
However, this surge in demand comes with a significant cost for the average consumer. As manufacturers prioritize high-margin AI components like HBM (High Bandwidth Memory), the supply for traditional electronics is tightening. Analysts predict that mainstream notebook prices could jump by as much as 40% by 2026 due to these rising component costs. This reflects a broader trend where the 'AI tax' on hardware is beginning to affect the wider electronics market, forcing a rebalancing between cutting-edge AI production and consumer-grade technology.