China’s CXMT is building a full supply chain to take on the world’s biggest memory chip makers

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ChangXin Memory Technologies, China’s most ambitious memory chip company, is doing something that would have sounded like fantasy five years ago. It’s building a vertically integrated supply chain designed to compete head-to-head with Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron, the three companies that have controlled the global DRAM market for decades.

The company recently locked in a 20 billion yuan (roughly $3 billion) long-term DRAM supply agreement with Tencent, one of China’s most powerful tech conglomerates.

The numbers tell the story

CXMT currently holds an estimated 4% to 11% share of the global DRAM market, depending on whether you measure by shipments or production capacity.

CXMT posted a gross margin of 37.8% for its most recent fiscal year, which trails Samsung’s 39.4% and Micron’s 39.8% by barely a couple of percentage points.

On the production side, CXMT operates fabs in Hefei and Beijing with a combined capacity of about 300,000 wafers per month. The company has plans to roughly double that output through new facilities in Shanghai.

CXMT is preparing for what could be the largest semiconductor IPO in Chinese history. The company is targeting a listing on Shanghai’s STAR Market that would raise approximately $4.2 billion.

Why this matters beyond semiconductors

CXMT is actively transitioning its product lineup toward more advanced offerings, including DDR5, LPDDR5, and high-bandwidth memory (HBM). HBM is the memory type that powers AI accelerators like Nvidia’s GPUs. SK Hynix has dominated that niche, but CXMT’s stated ambitions in HBM suggest it wants a piece of that AI-adjacent revenue stream.

Beyond the Tencent deal, domestic tech giants are increasingly buying CXMT’s chips. Corsair has reportedly been using CXMT memory in its products. Apple has been testing CXMT chips for devices intended for the Chinese market.

Micron has publicly acknowledged the enhanced capabilities of CXMT and other Chinese domestic chip makers.

The geopolitical backdrop

US-China tensions over semiconductor technology have been escalating for years, with Washington imposing increasingly restrictive export controls on advanced chipmaking equipment and technology. Those restrictions have created stronger incentives for China to build domestic alternatives.

For investors in the existing DRAM giants, more competition typically means lower average selling prices, which compresses margins across the industry. That dynamic has played out before in semiconductors, most notably in NAND flash, where Chinese entrant YMTC applied similar pricing pressure.

Memory chips are critical components in mining hardware, AI infrastructure, and the data centers that underpin decentralized networks. Any disruption to SK Hynix’s near-monopoly in HBM could reshape the cost structure of AI and crypto infrastructure alike.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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