CXMT secures $3B memory supply deal with Tencent as China’s DRAM ambitions accelerate

CXMT secures $3B memory supply deal with Tencent as China’s DRAM ambitions accelerate

China's leading domestic memory chip maker is locking in massive supply agreements while preparing a multi-billion dollar IPO to fund capacity expansion.

ChangXin Memory Technologies, China’s top homegrown DRAM manufacturer, has landed a $3 billion memory supply deal with Tencent. The agreement underscores just how aggressively Chinese tech giants are moving to secure domestic chip supply chains as geopolitical tensions continue to reshape the global semiconductor landscape.

CXMT already counts Tencent, Alibaba Cloud, and ByteDance among its clients through long-term supply agreements established prior to 2026.

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The numbers behind CXMT’s surge

In Q1 2026, the company reported revenues of approximately RMB 50.8 billion, roughly $7 billion. That represents a 719% increase year-over-year.

CXMT currently holds an estimated 7-11% share of the global DRAM market. The DRAM industry has historically been dominated by three players: Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron. CXMT is projecting it could reach approximately 14% market share by 2027.

To fuel that expansion, the company is pursuing an IPO on the Shanghai STAR Market with plans to raise around $4.2 billion (RMB 29.5 billion). Those funds are earmarked specifically for DRAM production capacity expansion.

Why Tencent needs this deal

US export controls have progressively tightened access to advanced semiconductor technology for Chinese companies. Chinese firms are hedging aggressively toward domestic suppliers as a result.

What this means for investors

CXMT’s technology still trails the leading-edge nodes produced by Samsung and SK Hynix. Export controls could also tighten further, potentially limiting CXMT’s access to the advanced manufacturing equipment it needs for next-generation DRAM.

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

CXMT secures $3B memory supply deal with Tencent as China’s DRAM ambitions accelerate

CXMT secures $3B memory supply deal with Tencent as China’s DRAM ambitions accelerate

China's leading domestic memory chip maker is locking in massive supply agreements while preparing a multi-billion dollar IPO to fund capacity expansion.

ChangXin Memory Technologies, China’s top homegrown DRAM manufacturer, has landed a $3 billion memory supply deal with Tencent. The agreement underscores just how aggressively Chinese tech giants are moving to secure domestic chip supply chains as geopolitical tensions continue to reshape the global semiconductor landscape.

CXMT already counts Tencent, Alibaba Cloud, and ByteDance among its clients through long-term supply agreements established prior to 2026.

Advertisement

The numbers behind CXMT’s surge

In Q1 2026, the company reported revenues of approximately RMB 50.8 billion, roughly $7 billion. That represents a 719% increase year-over-year.

CXMT currently holds an estimated 7-11% share of the global DRAM market. The DRAM industry has historically been dominated by three players: Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron. CXMT is projecting it could reach approximately 14% market share by 2027.

To fuel that expansion, the company is pursuing an IPO on the Shanghai STAR Market with plans to raise around $4.2 billion (RMB 29.5 billion). Those funds are earmarked specifically for DRAM production capacity expansion.

Why Tencent needs this deal

US export controls have progressively tightened access to advanced semiconductor technology for Chinese companies. Chinese firms are hedging aggressively toward domestic suppliers as a result.

What this means for investors

CXMT’s technology still trails the leading-edge nodes produced by Samsung and SK Hynix. Export controls could also tighten further, potentially limiting CXMT’s access to the advanced manufacturing equipment it needs for next-generation DRAM.

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