Could explain why ram prices might have been raised

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Nine chip makers have been fined 331m euros (£283.1m, $404.2m) by European Union regulators for illegally fixing prices.

The companies involved are Samsung, Hynix, Infineon, NEC, Hitachi, Mitsubishi, Toshiba, Elpida and Nanya.

A 10th chip maker, Micron, was also part of the price-fixing cartel but escaped a fine in return for alerting the competition authorities.

The chips - DRAMS - are used in popular items such as personal computers.

Samsung received the biggest single fine of 146m euros. The second biggest was 57m euros, which was levied on Germany's Infineon.

All the fines were reduced by 10% because the companies co-operated with the probe.

The cartel, in operation between 1998 and 2002, involved a "network of contacts" who shared secret information. They colluded to set prices for DRAM chips sold to major PC makers and server manufacturers, the commission said.

'Speed up'
The penalties mark the first settlement decision in a cartel case in which companies received a 10% cut in penalties in return for admitting involvement.

The investigation began in 2002, when Micron blew the whistle on the cartel.

The EU's Competition Commissioner, Joaquin Almunia, said: "By acknowledging their participation in a cartel the companies have allowed the Commission to bring this long-running investigation to a close and to free up resources to investigate other suspected cartels."

He added that future cases should be concluded more speedily.

"As the procedure is applied to new cases it is expected to speed up investigations significantly."

All but one of the companies, Germany's Infineon, are non-EU businesses.

The EU's anti-trust regulator said they were all penalised because they sell their products in the European Economic Area and were therefore subject to EU law, which bans practises that restrict competition.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/10126755.stm
 
well the prices have gone up on ddr2 because ddr3 is in production more heavily now... and vendors were losing money on ddr2...

they were basically producing too much compared to the slim demand and now have decreased production levels so prices have gone back up. the fines probably have something to do with it but memory is a commodity item really and is very susceptible to price fluctuations due to the demand and supply mechanism.
 
There's a thread in Memory section (Clicky) which people are asking the same question.
I purchased some Patriot ram for my i7 system last June which cost me £70 ~ today it's around £140 :eek:
 
The $ exhange rate is quite poor at the moment, that brings on high prices because vendors up their trade prices to companies like OCuK which have to suffer of the memory prices.

Its no ones choice, if the $ exhange goes down, it means high price for vendors and then on to traders, they dont want to but its life at the moment.
 
There's a thread in Memory section (Clicky) which people are asking the same question.
I purchased some Patriot ram for my i7 system last June which cost me £70 ~ today it's around £140 :eek:

the CL8 kit? got it for £100 next thing I knew it was £140 two weeks later
 
Cheeky ********. Also, I've heard that a major German memory manufacturer had gone belly-up not too long ago, which in turn ruffled some feathers in the market across the whole of Europe.


- Ordokai
 
Most expensive component in a build at the bottom end is RAM, but to be honest bottom end doesn't need more than 2Gb, people seem to think the minimum is 4Gb!!
 
]
'Speed up'
The penalties mark the first settlement decision in a cartel case in which companies received a 10% cut in penalties in return for admitting involvement.

The investigation began in 2002, when Micron blew the whistle on the cartel.

He added that future cases should be concluded more speedily.

"As the procedure is applied to new cases it is expected to speed up investigations significantly."


I'd bloody hope future cases are concluded more speedily! They admitted they were wrong, after the whistle was blown in 2002, and they've just been fined?!
 
I don't think that would explain why ram 8 years down the line the prices went up in price. I read somewhere it was due to manufacturers cutting back due to the recession and over doing it, now with so much demand and not enough chips they can stick the price up due to lack of stock. Coupled with the poor £ exchange rate and ram doubles in price :(
 
Yep this cartel business is essentially 'old' news, in that it shouldn't be affecting prices now.

Of course, that's not to say that there isn't a new cartel.
 
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