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Chinese chip firm secures $1.86B memory deal exceeding annual sales

Created at 11 Jun · 10:05 AM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

Biwin, a Chinese memory module maker, has signed a two-year, $1.86 billion agreement for flash memory chips, surpassing its annual revenue. The deal aims to secure supply amid high demand from AI servers and data centers.

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Key Numbers

$1.86 billionBiwin's memory chip deal value
two-yearduration of the agreement
Q3 2026 through Q2 2028purchase period
11.3 billion yuanBiwin's 2025 revenue
$1.7 billionBiwin's 2025 revenue in USD
12.6 billion yuandeal value in yuan
4.45 per cent2026 purchase volume as % of 2025 procurement
14.88 per cent2027 purchase volume as % of 2025 procurement

Who's Involved

Biwin
Chinese memory module maker signing a large chip deal
Shanghai Stock Exchange
received the company's filing
Chinese chip firm secures $1.86B memory deal exceeding annual sales

↳ Why This Matters

The deal illustrates how Chinese tech firms are responding to supply chain pressures and surging demand for AI infrastructure by locking in critical components, potentially impacting global memory chip availability and pricing.

Key facts

  • Chinese memory module maker Biwin signed a $1.86 billion deal for flash memory chips.
  • The two-year agreement spans from Q3 2026 to Q2 2028.
  • The contract value exceeds Biwin's projected 2025 revenue of $1.7 billion.
  • The deal aims to secure supply amid high demand from AI servers and data centers.
  • The supplier was not disclosed due to confidentiality.

Chinese memory module maker Biwin has secured a significant supply of flash memory chips through a two-year agreement valued at $1.86 billion, a sum larger than its projected annual revenue. The deal, which runs from the third quarter of 2026 to the second quarter of 2028, is structured as a locked-volume, locked-price arrangement for enterprise-grade chips.

Biwin stated that the contract is intended to guarantee medium- to long-term capacity and delivery schedules, thereby mitigating risks associated with market fluctuations. The company's 2025 revenue is estimated at 11.3 billion yuan ($1.7 billion), making the 12.6 billion yuan ($1.86 billion) deal substantially larger. This move highlights a trend among Chinese downstream storage firms to proactively secure upstream supply during the current memory upcycle.

The arrangement underscores the intense demand for memory chips, driven by the burgeoning needs of artificial intelligence servers and data centers, which are currently straining global supply chains.

Frequently asked questions

Biwin signed a two-year agreement worth US$1.86 billion to secure flash memory chips.

The deal's value of US$1.86 billion (12.6 billion yuan) exceeds Biwin's projected 2025 revenue of 11.3 billion yuan (US$1.7 billion).

Purchases are scheduled to occur in batches from the third quarter of 2026 through the second quarter of 2028.

The supplier was not disclosed by Biwin, citing commercial confidentiality.

What Happens Next

01Biwin will begin purchasing chips under the agreement in Q3 2026.
02The company will continue purchases through Q2 2028.

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Cadence

How It Developed

Biwin signed a two-year agreement worth $1.86 billion for flash memory chips.
The deal is larger than Biwin's projected 2025 revenue of $1.7 billion.
The arrangement is a locked-volume, locked-price contract for enterprise-grade chips.
Purchases are scheduled from the third quarter of 2026 through the second quarter of 2028.
The supplier was not disclosed due to commercial confidentiality.
Biwin stated the contract would secure capacity and delivery schedules, reducing supply disruption risks.
The deal's value is equivalent to 12.6 billion yuan, exceeding mandatory disclosure thresholds.

Sources

T1
To beat chip crunch, Chinese firm inks memory deal bigger than its salesSouth China Morning Post

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