TradingKey - During the U.S. overnight trading session on April 8, an ETF listed for less than a week suddenly surged. The Roundhill Memory ETF (Ticker: DRAM) jumped over 18% at one point during overnight trading, while its holding, Micron Technology ( MU) rose 8%, SanDisk ( SNDK) rose 7%, Western Digital ( WDC) rose 8%, as the entire storage sector rallied collectively during the overnight session. In the previous trading day, the ETF closed at $29.16, a single-day gain of 5.04%. Having been listed for less than a week, its cumulative increase has already exceeded 11%.
On April 2, 2026, Roundhill Investments launched the world's first pure-play memory-themed ETF on the U.S. Cboe BZX Exchange, under the ticker DRAM. Unlike typical semiconductor ETFs, which usually hold a broad array of companies involved in chip design, equipment manufacturing, and foundries—thereby significantly diluting the weight of memory chips—the DRAM ETF maintains strict selection criteria: a company must derive more than 50% of its revenue from memory businesses to be included.
As of April 5, 2026, the ETF holds a total of 9 stocks. The top three holdings are Micron Technology (24.63%), Samsung Electronics (24.11%), and SK Hynix (23.08%), which together account for over 70% of the portfolio. The remaining weights are: SanDisk (4.90%), Kioxia (4.86%), Western Digital (4.77%), Seagate (4.73%), Nanya Technology (3.89%), and Winbond (2.40%). The expense ratio is 0.65%, and the fund is actively managed with holdings rebalanced quarterly.
Notably, the ETF utilizes a financial instrument called a "Total Return Swap" to hold a portion of its assets, meaning its actual risk exposure may exceed 100%, making its structure more complex than standard ETFs that hold shares directly.
The concentrated rally in the overnight session did not happen in a vacuum. Over the past 24 hours, the memory supply chain has released three layers of positive signals, each more significant than the last.
The first layer is earnings validation. Samsung Electronics released its Q1 2026 earnings guidance on April 7, with operating profit soaring to 57.2 trillion won, a 755% year-on-year increase, with single-quarter profits already exceeding those of the entire 2025 fiscal year. Revenue was approximately 133 trillion won, up 68.1% year-on-year, marking the first time Samsung’s quarterly revenue has surpassed 100 trillion won since its listing. On the same day, A-share memory distributor Shannon Semiconductor forecasted that its Q1 net profit attributable to shareholders would grow by 6,714% to 8,747% year-on-year. Profitability is surging across the entire supply chain.
The second layer is the continued strengthening of price hike signals. Samsung Electronics has already finalized Q2 pricing with major customers, with DRAM contract prices set to rise by another 30% following a 100% hike in Q1. Global semiconductor research firm TrendForce offers an even more optimistic forecast: overall DRAM contract prices are expected to increase 58% to 63% quarter-on-quarter in Q2, while NAND flash contract prices are projected to rise 70% to 75%.
The third layer involves profound changes in industry rules. Microsoft ( MSFT) and Google ( GOOGL) are currently negotiating three-year long-term DRAM supply agreements with SK Hynix. Unlike traditional contracts, these agreements introduce price floor guarantees and a 10% to 30% prepayment mechanism for the first time—buyers are no longer waiting for market price fluctuations to find bargains, but are proactively paying upfront to secure future capacity. Samsung is also reportedly discussing three- to five-year long-term supply arrangements with Microsoft and Google, while Micron has confirmed the signing of its first five-year strategic customer agreement. The simultaneous shift by the three major memory manufacturers toward long-term agreements is unprecedented in the history of the memory industry.
Behind the overnight trading frenzy, the storage market is experiencing a rare divergence: DDR4 spot prices plunged over 30% in a single day, with 32GB modules dropping from 2,100 yuan to 1,320 yuan. "Memory stick prices falling off a cliff" hit trending searches, and DDR5 kits fell nearly 30% within a month.
However, the contract side is the complete opposite—Q1 2026 DRAM contract prices are set to surge 90%–95% quarter-over-quarter, and Q2 price hikes have already been locked in.
Why the divergence?
First is concentration risk. The top three holdings account for over 70% in total; therefore, price fluctuations in Micron, Samsung, or SK Hynix will significantly impact the ETF's net asset value (NAV). Morningstar analysts suggest that such thematic ETFs are more suitable as "satellite allocations" within a portfolio, with positions kept at a low proportion.
Second is geopolitical risk. SK Hynix has submitted a listing application to the U.S. SEC, planning to list on the U.S. market via ADRs with a fundraising scale of approximately $6.7 billion to $10 billion. Once the listing is complete, Micron will lose its uniqueness as the "only U.S.-listed DRAM company," which could trigger a diversion of capital.
Third is industry cyclical risk. Although AI is changing the operational dynamics of the memory industry, its strongly cyclical nature has not entirely disappeared. The risk of price declines following excessive capacity expansion remains an uncertainty that long-term holders must confront.
The birth of the DRAM ETF and the concentrated breakout during the overnight trading session reflect more than just a revaluation of memory companies; they signal a profound shift in the power structure of the technology supply chain in the AI era. As tech giants like Microsoft and Google begin making prepayments to "secure" DRAM supplies, the strategic importance of memory chips is no longer a variable that can be ignored.
For retail investors, this ETF serves more as an observation window rather than a core holding tool. If you have a deep understanding of the AI supply chain and are willing to assume high sector concentration risk, it can function as a supplement to semiconductor industry ETFs. If you are new to the field, it is advisable to first monitor contract price trends, the capacity planning of the three major manufacturers, and the capital expenditure trends of cloud service providers—these variables are the true keys that determine the trajectory of the memory sector.