Dixon Tech faces 25% volume drop as RAM surges in 2026
Dixon Technologies (India) Ltd
DIXON
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Why Dixon Technologies is back in focus
Dixon Technologies (India) Ltd. is facing renewed scrutiny after brokerages flagged a sharp rise in global memory prices and its potential impact on India’s smartphone demand. CLSA, in a recent note, warned that Indian smartphone volumes remain under pressure and could stay weak if rising RAM and storage costs push handset prices higher. The warning is significant for Dixon because smartphones are a key end-market for the electronics manufacturing services (EMS) ecosystem.
The concern is not about near-term profitability alone. Both CLSA and Morgan Stanley highlighted that the bigger risk is muted demand and lower volumes, especially in the budget segment that dominates India’s smartphone market.
What CLSA said about India’s smartphone volumes
CLSA pointed to a steep slowdown in smartphone shipments, noting that Indian smartphone volumes in January fell by around 25% on both a sequential and year-on-year basis. The brokerage linked the weakness to memory prices that have risen sharply since August of the previous year.
The note also flagged pricing pressure, particularly for entry-level phones, where customers are more sensitive to price increases. CLSA’s view is that rising memory costs can lift average selling prices (ASPs) meaningfully, making demand recovery harder for low and mid-end models.
The memory price surge driving the stress
Morgan Stanley added detail to the pricing backdrop, highlighting the jump in Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM) prices. According to a CNBC-TV18 report cited by the brokerage, DRAM spot prices as of February 13, 2026 were up 6.8 times year-on-year.
The increase is not limited to spot markets. Morgan Stanley said average mobile DRAM prices in the first quarter of calendar year 2026 rose 55% quarter-on-quarter for LPDDR4 and 64% quarter-on-quarter for LPDDR5.
CLSA also cited sharp contract price moves during January. It noted DDR5 and DDR4 contract rates rose 119% and 63% month-on-month, respectively, while NAND contract prices jumped 37% to 67% in the same period.
Why India is more exposed than many markets
CLSA argued India is particularly vulnerable because it relies heavily on imports and has limited bargaining power in global memory procurement. The brokerage said India accounts for less than 4% of global memory demand in dollar terms.
It also noted that the domestic market is skewed towards legacy DRAM and NAND, largely due to the concentration of low-end smartphones and consumer electronics. With global suppliers prioritising higher-margin, AI-grade memory, the supply squeeze in mainstream memory products can transmit more directly into pricing pressure for smartphones sold in India.
How higher memory costs translate into smartphone price pressure
CLSA estimated memory accounts for 20% to 25% of smartphone costs. In that context, a broad-based rise in DRAM and NAND prices can force handset makers to increase average selling prices.
In its February 19 note, CLSA said rising memory costs could inflate smartphone ASPs by 10% to 25%, with the impact disproportionately heavier on lower-end consumers. The risk, in the brokerage’s framing, is that higher prices meet an already muted demand environment, creating a volume headwind.
What this means for Dixon Technologies’ operating outlook
For Dixon, the central issue raised by CLSA is volumes rather than margins. The brokerage noted that Dixon follows a cost pass-through model, which should limit direct margin damage from higher memory prices. But even with pass-through, weaker end-demand can reduce order flows and production volumes.
CLSA said Dixon could be among the most impacted companies in the EMS space because consumer electronics, especially smartphones, are expected to feel the largest demand impact from higher memory-driven pricing.
Broker actions: CLSA downgrade, Morgan Stanley stays cautious
CLSA downgraded Dixon Technologies to ‘Hold’ from ‘Outperform’ and cut its target price by 23% to Rs 12,100 per share from Rs 15,880 earlier. In another reference, the earlier target was cited as Rs 15,800, with the revised target unchanged at Rs 12,100.
Morgan Stanley maintained an ‘Underweight’ rating on Dixon Technologies with a price target of Rs 8,157 per share. The brokerage emphasised that nearly 75% of India’s smartphone market is priced below USD 300, making it sensitive to component cost inflation. It added that higher DRAM prices could become an incremental headwind for an industry already seeing muted demand.
Stock reaction and near-term investor focus
Dixon Technologies shares fell more than 3% on Friday after Morgan Stanley reiterated its ‘Underweight’ view. Separately, the stock fell nearly 2% on Thursday as CLSA’s downgrade came through after a prolonged phase of underperformance.
CLSA also pointed out the stock had corrected nearly 40% from its 52-week highs. At the latest close cited at Rs 11,479, the revised CLSA target of Rs 12,100 implied upside of about 5%, suggesting limited near-term return potential based on that estimate.
Key catalysts CLSA wants investors to watch
CLSA flagged two catalysts for Dixon Technologies: easing of memory prices and consummation of the Vivo joint venture. The brokerage framed these as developments that could change the demand and visibility picture, particularly if component inflation cools and industry volumes stabilise.
Beyond those catalysts, the key variable remains the trajectory of memory pricing, especially as CLSA expects the memory industry to enter a supercycle driven by AI-led demand for high-bandwidth memory and DDR5, while supply for mainstream memory remains tight.
Snapshot of the key facts
Why the story matters for the EMS sector
The episode underscores a structural risk for India’s EMS sector: dependence on imported components whose prices are set in global cycles. CLSA’s broader warning is that when memory suppliers prioritise higher-margin AI-grade products, mainstream segments can face tighter supply and higher prices.
For companies aligned to high-volume consumer categories such as smartphones, demand elasticity becomes the key swing factor. As brokerages highlighted, the budget-heavy nature of India’s market means even modest cost inflation can have an outsized effect on volumes.
Conclusion
CLSA and Morgan Stanley have both linked Dixon Technologies’ near-term sentiment to the surge in global memory prices and the resulting pressure on India’s smartphone volumes. CLSA’s downgrade to ‘Hold’ and Morgan Stanley’s continued ‘Underweight’ stance put the focus on whether memory prices ease and whether industry volumes recover from the January slump. Investors are also watching the two catalysts identified by CLSA: easing of memory prices and the consummation of the Vivo joint venture.
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