# Artikel Terkait Chips

Pusat Berita HTX menyediakan artikel terbaru dan analisis mendalam mengenai "Chips", mencakup tren pasar, pembaruan proyek, perkembangan teknologi, dan kebijakan regulasi di industri kripto.

The US Stock Market in 2026, It's Almost Too Easy, and That Makes Me Nervous

The U.S. stock market's performance in 2026, particularly in the semiconductor memory sector, has generated significant returns that make some investors uneasy. A popular sentiment contrasts the perceived skill required for success in China's A-shares with the apparent ease of profiting from simply holding U.S. stocks. The primary driver is a global memory chip boom. Stocks like Micron, Seagate, Western Digital, and especially SanDisk (spinning off from WDC in 2025) have skyrocketed, with some gains exceeding 500% or even 2200%. Korean giants Samsung and SK Hynix, dominating their domestic index, have also surged. This rally is fueled by an AI-driven demand surge for memory like HBM (High-Bandwidth Memory), critical for AI chips. Tech giants like Google and Microsoft are placing massive, "unpriced" orders, while analysts continuously upgrade forecasts. SK Hynix reported its 2026 HBM capacity is already sold out. Despite record profits and sky-high margins (e.g., SK Hynix's 72% operating margin), major memory manufacturers are deliberately restricting capital expenditure and capacity expansion, controlling over 90% of DRAM supply. This supply discipline sustains high prices but draws parallels to cartel behavior. The situation presents two narratives. The bullish case sees AI demand as a structural, long-term shift with a prolonged supply gap. The bearish case, exemplified by short-seller Citron's failed bet against SanDisk, warns of a classic commodity cycle where prices eventually crash rapidly, as seen historically. The irony is noted: while retail investors marvel at easy gains, insiders like Western Digital are selling SanDisk shares at a 25% discount. Ultimately, the high cost of memory in consumer devices feeds into the record profits of memory companies and the soaring stock prices, leading many to question the sustainability of a market where making money seems "as easy as breathing."

marsbit2 hari yang lalu 02:57

The US Stock Market in 2026, It's Almost Too Easy, and That Makes Me Nervous

marsbit2 hari yang lalu 02:57

AI Giants Enter the Dark Forest

In the AI industry's "dark forest," major players like Anthropic, OpenAI, and DeepSeek are strategically withholding their most advanced models to avoid becoming targets in a high-stakes competitive landscape. Anthropic released Claude Opus 4.7 but admitted it underperforms compared to their unreleased model Mythos, citing safety concerns. They delayed addressing user complaints about performance regression until OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 launch, highlighting a tactic of controlled disclosure aligned with competitors’ moves. OpenAI’s GPT-5.5, though a full retrain since GPT-4.5, was seen as incremental rather than revolutionary. Leaks revealed internal models like Glacier and Heisenberg, indicating significant unreleased capabilities. OpenAI acknowledges a "capability overhang," where real model power exceeds what users experience, often due to infrastructure-driven throttling. DeepSeek launched V4 Preview, a cost-efficient model, but its full potential (V4 Pro Max) awaits Huawei’s Ascend 950 super-nodes量产 in late 2026. Their strategy focuses on affordability and scalability, aiming to democratize AI access globally, a move noted even by NVIDIA’s CEO as a disruptive threat. Together, these actions reflect a broader trend: leading AI labs are deliberately pacing releases, hiding strengths, and aligning disclosures with competitive dynamics—each avoiding the risk of exposure in a forest where first movers become targets.

marsbit04/25 12:47

AI Giants Enter the Dark Forest

marsbit04/25 12:47

The DeepSeek You've Been Waiting For Has Long Changed

The article discusses the delayed release of DeepSeek V4, a highly anticipated AI model in China, and explores the reasons behind its slowed development. Initially a leader in the global AI race, DeepSeek has fallen behind competitors like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google, which release major updates every few months. A key factor is DeepSeek's shift in focus due to national strategic priorities. In early 2025, the Chinese government encouraged the company to use Huawei’s Ascend processors instead of NVIDIA’s GPUs, aligning with broader efforts to achieve technological self-reliance. DeepSeek attempted to train its models on Huawei’s Ascend 910C chips but faced technical challenges, including instability and communication issues during distributed training. As a result, the company continued using NVIDIA hardware for training while only using Ascend chips for inference. In 2026, DeepSeek prioritized adapting V4 to Huawei’s new Ascend 950PR and Cambricon chips, aiming for a full migration from NVIDIA’s CUDA to Huawei’s CANN framework. This adaptation process, particularly ensuring precision alignment across hardware, consumed significant time and resources, slowing down model iteration. The delay also reflects DeepSeek’s evolving role from a purely market-driven entity to a "national mission-oriented" company. This shift has come at a cost: the model now lags behind competitors in areas like code generation and multimodal capabilities, and the company has faced talent drain, with key researchers leaving for better-paying opportunities at larger tech firms. Despite these challenges, V4’s release is seen as a potential milestone for China’s AI industry, demonstrating that advanced models can run on domestic hardware ecosystems. While it may not be a groundbreaking model in terms of performance, its success could validate China’s broader strategy for AI independence.

marsbit04/15 10:32

The DeepSeek You've Been Waiting For Has Long Changed

marsbit04/15 10:32

活动图片