RAM Price Surge Squeezes Indian Smartphone Makers, Volumes Drop 25%

A sharp global surge in RAM prices is creating significant headwinds for Indian smartphone manufacturers, leading to a 25% year-on-year volume decline in January. The price spike, driven by AI industry demand diverting supply, has increased device costs and raised availability concerns, particularly in the entry-level segment. Major handset makers like Motorola and Realme have seen steep annual volume declines. Despite these challenges, India solidified its position as the world's second-largest mobile phone producer, with smartphones becoming its top export category, largely driven by Apple's manufacturing.

Key Points: RAM Price Hike Hits Indian Smartphone Volumes, Exports

  • RAM prices tripled since last year
  • Smartphone volumes fell ~25% YoY in Jan
  • Average selling prices rose 8% since Sept
  • Apple led 76% of India's $30B smartphone exports
2 min read

Indian smartphone volumes may see headwinds from global RAM prices: Report

Global RAM price surge pressures Indian smartphone shipments, causing a 25% volume drop and rising device costs, CLSA report reveals.

Indian smartphone volumes may see headwinds from global RAM prices: Report
"smartphone prices are likely to rise this year because of the RAM shortage - Carl Pei"

New Delhi, March 15

Indian smartphone makers are likely to face a challenging period as global memory or RAM prices surge, squeezing volumes and pushing up average selling prices, a new report has said.

Brokerage CLSA said in a report that Indian smartphone shipments remained under pressure on a YoY and sequential basis in January, with volumes falling about 25 per cent, due to a sharp rise in RAM prices that began in August 2025.

NDTV Profit has earlier reported that RAM prices have tripled since last year amid unprecedented demand from large artificial intelligence (AI) players, which has diverted supply away from the retail market.

The spike in RAM prices has translated into higher device prices and availability concerns, with industry sources pointing to an 8 per cent increase in average selling prices since September.

Nothing CEO Carl Pei has previously warned that smartphone prices are likely to rise this year because of the RAM shortage, which CLSA forecasted could last at least until FY27. The brokerage noted that pricing pressure is most notable in the entry‑level segment.

Major handset makers, such as Motorola, Oppo, and Realme, which source components from Dixon Technologies, have seen annual volume declines ranging from 20 per cent to 68 per cent, the firm said. The brokerage also raised doubts about component manufacturers meeting fiscal‑year guidance and growth targets for FY27.

Smartphones were India's top export category for the first time, with a total $30.13 billion worth of exports in the January-December period. Apple accounted for 76 per cent of total smartphone exports

India became the world's second-largest mobile phone producer, with more than 99 per cent of phones sold domestically. Now, Made in India has moved up the manufacturing value chain.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The AI boom is having these unintended ripple effects. While it's great for tech advancement, it's squeezing supply for essential consumer electronics. Hope the government can look into this and provide some relief to domestic manufacturers.
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Priya S
On the positive side, the article shows how far 'Made in India' has come! We're the world's second-largest producer and a top exporter. This RAM crisis is a temporary hurdle. Our manufacturing ecosystem is strong enough to navigate this. 🇮🇳
R
Rohit P
Time to hold on to our current phones for a bit longer, I guess. No point upgrading if prices are shooting up 8% or more. Maybe this will reduce some of the mindless consumerism around new launches every other month.
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Vikram M
The concentration is concerning though. Apple making up 76% of our smartphone exports? We need to build more homegrown champions who can compete globally, not just assemble for foreign brands. PLI scheme needs to focus on this.
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Karthik V
Respectfully, while the export numbers are impressive, the report highlights a core vulnerability. We are still heavily dependent on global supply chains for critical components like RAM. Until we start making semiconductors and memory chips here, such shocks will keep happening. Aatmanirbhar Bharat needs to go deeper.

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