『Kyber Delay, Micron's Long-Term AI Contracts & Singapore GPU Diversion | Ep 1』のカバーアート

Kyber Delay, Micron's Long-Term AI Contracts & Singapore GPU Diversion | Ep 1

Kyber Delay, Micron's Long-Term AI Contracts & Singapore GPU Diversion | Ep 1

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(00:00:00) Kyber Delay, Micron's Long-Term AI Contracts & Singapore GPU Diversion | Ep 1
(00:01:10) NVL576 and Cluster Timeline Risk
(00:01:53) Micron Locks AI Memory Supply
(00:02:53) Singapore Chip Diversion Prosecution
(00:03:41) Intel Valuation Gap

Nvidia's most ambitious rack-scale system, the Kyber NVL144, has been pushed back to 2028 — not because of software or yield issues, but because the midplane PCB at its core cannot yet be reliably manufactured at scale. That physical constraint has direct consequences for the NVL576 cluster system, which depends on Kyber racks linking together optically. For hyperscalers planning billion-dollar infrastructure bets around that architecture, this is more than a product schedule story.

Micron, meanwhile, is moving decisively in the other direction. The company has signed 16 long-term AI memory supply contracts running through 2030, complete with price floors and ceilings. Hyperscalers are reserving high-bandwidth memory years in advance — a signal that HBM is now treated as mission-critical infrastructure, not a commodity. The old boom-and-bust memory cycle may not apply here. The risk to watch: whether South Korea's planned capacity expansion skews toward commodity DRAM rather than AI-optimised HBM4.

On the export control front, Singapore's prosecution of Aperia Group executives is escalating. Executives now face money laundering charges, with bail raised to 1.2 million dollars, in a case alleging 55 million dollars in proceeds from diverting Nvidia GPU servers through Dell and Super Micro into China. Enforcement is becoming personal — individuals face prison time, not just corporate fines.

Finally, Intel's market cap sits at 528 billion dollars against foundry revenue of just 174 million dollars last quarter, with analysts projecting 21% downside. The gap between Intel's valuation and its foundry reality is the sharpest test of whether any bull case holds.

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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