Intel says Micron will not be able to purchase its stake in IM Flash Technologies at least until January 1, 2019:
“Micron’s statement is a pre-announcement. They can’t officially make
the call until January 1, 2019. The operation of the IMFT factory would
not change until after the close of the call, which is at Intel’s
discretion for up to one year. There is no near-term change to Intel’s
plans in the coming quarters—this has been part of our planning for some
time now. Intel has a number of manufacturing options available to us
within the time window. We’ve been shipping a broad portfolio of Intel
Optane technology products for over a year with a continually expanding
product line. We will continue to lead the industry with this exciting
new technology.”
Original, 10/19/18, 8:54 a.m. PT:
Micron plans to acquire Intel’s stake in the Intel-Micron (IM) Flash
Technologies joint venture the two companies formed together in 2006,
according to a Reuters report this week. The future of 3D XPoint, a
non-volatile memory tech used in Intel Optane and Micron QuantX, remains
relatively uncertain as the two companies start working on it
separately.
Micron Will Own IM Flash Technologies
After the acquisition is complete, Micron will own the full IM Flash
Technologies division. The company will pay $1.5 billion for Intel’s
stake, as well as take over Intel’s $1 billion debt to the joint
venture. When the two companies formed the venture back in 2006, they
each contributed $1.2 billion.
The two companies formed IM Flash Technologies when they started working
on 3D XPoint memory together. Both Intel and Micron have launched their
own 3D XPoint brands, as mentioned above, but only Intel is selling 3D
XPoint storage and started earlier this year. Micron is going to wait
for generation 2 of the technology to be ready before selling its own 3D
XPoint SSDs in 2019.
Reports have said that Intel’s Optane sales have been quite
disappointing, presumably due to multiple reasons, including
product-market mismatch, high prices for an unproven technology and
competitors, such as Samsung coming out with Z-NAND flash alternatives,
that are almost as good and much cheaper.
3D XPoint Challenges
It didn’t help that Intel initially promised that its 3D XPoint flash
technology would be “1,000x” faster than flash technology. Presumably,
Intel was comparing Optane to the lowest speed flash tech found on the
market (in microSDs and such) and not the fastest available SSDs at the
time, but that’s not the impression it gave technology enthusiasts and
media.
This July, Intel and Micron announced that they would cease
collaborating on 3D XPoint after the 2nd generation technology is
finalized and manufacture and sell their own 3D XPoint storage
technology independently.
Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra revealed in a previous earnings call that the
sales of 3D XPoint wafers to Intel were disappointing, so the company
may eventually stop selling the tech to Intel.
It will be interesting to see if 3D XPoint’s situation on the market
improves or gets worse starting with the 3rd generation, when the two
companies will be designing and manufacturing their own variants.
However, chances are that the SSD competition will also become more
fierce in the coming years, which of course, should be a good thing for
consumers.
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