In a joint press release issued early this morning, SK Hynix and Intel have announced that Intel will be selling the entirety of its NAND memory business to SK Hynix. The deal, which values Intel’s NAND holdings at $9 billion, will see the company transfer over the NAND business in two parts, with SK Hynix eventually acquiring all IP, facilities, and personnel related to Intel’s NAND efforts. Notably, however, Intel is not selling their overarching Non-Volatile Memory Solutions Group; instead the company will be holding on to their Optane memory technology as they continue to develop and sell that technology.

Per the terms of the unusual agreement, SK Hynix will be acquiring Intel’s NAND memory business in two parts, with the deal not expected to completely close until March of 2025. Under the first phase, which will take place in 2021 once all relevant regulatory bodies have approved the seal, SK Hynix will pay Intel the first $7 billion for their SSD business and Intel’s sole NAND fab in Dalian, China. This will see Intel’s consumer and enterprise SSD businesses transferred to SK Hynix, along with the relevant IP and employees for the SSD business, but not any NAND IP or employees. Similarly, while SK Hynix will get the Dalian fab, the first phase does not come with the employees that operate it.

Following the first phase, Intel will continue to develop and manufacture NAND out of the Dalian fab for roughly the next four years. This period is set to last until the rest of the deal fully closes in March of 2025. At that point, SK Hynix will pay Intel $2 billion for the rest of their NAND business. This will finally transfer all of Intel’s NAND IP and related employees over to SK Hynix, along with the Dalian fab employees. Intel and SK Hynix have not offered any explanation for the prolonged acquisition, so we’re hoping to find out a bit more with the companies’ relevant earnings calls this week.

Meanwhile, Intel will continue to hold on to their Optane memory business. Optane is considered a “platform differentiator” by the company, as Intel intends to continue leveraging the technology for their unique, high-capacity NV-DIMMs. Accordingly, Intel has announced that they will be continuing to develop the underlying 3D XPoint technology and sell products based on it, which is consistent with their long-term aspirations of making Optane its own tier in the memory/storage hierarchy.

Overall, selling off their NAND business is a big step for Intel, a company that started out making memory. But it’s not entirely unexpected, as Intel has never been quite as successful with their NAND business as they would have liked. And the core of the company’s NAND efforts, their longstanding IMFT joint-venture with Micron, started winding down in 2018 when the two companies announced that they would stop jointly developing flash memory.

Since then, Intel has largely been walking its own path, securing the #5 spot in the NAND industry (generally right behind #4 SK Hynix) and releasing new products, but struggling with the commodity nature of the NAND business. While Intel’s Non-Volatile Memory Solutions Group (NSG) as a whole brought in $4.4B in revenue for 2019, the group has lost money for 4 of the last 5 years, recording flat or negative operating incomes. Only in the last six months has Intel made any real money off of NAND, reporting $600M in operating income for the first half of 2020. So although NSG – and by large part, Intel’s NAND business – have played a big part in Intel’s record revenues, they haven’t turned a significant profit for a company that’s renowned for their 60% gross margins.


Intel NSG Revenue and Operating Income, 2015-2019

Meanwhile for SK Hynix, the Intel deal opens the door to some new opportunities, and it also helps formerly fourth-place company company scale up to deal with the competition of its three remaining rivals, Samsung, Kioxia/WD, and Micron. TrendForce estimates that once this deal closes, SK Hynix will become the second-largest vendor of NAND, with over 20% market share, placing it behind market leader (and rival Korean firm) Samsung. Like many other commodity component markets, the NAND flash market has been subject to wild swings in profitability and the resulting pressure to consolidate, so by picking up Intel’s NAND business, SK Hynix will be in a stronger position going forward.

But the real pearl for SK Hynix is Intel’s enterprise SSD business, which the company specifically calls out in its joint press release. Despite its overall modest size, Intel’s NAND business has a major presence in the enterprise SSD market thanks to its early investment there as well as its domination of enterprise CPU sales. Intel’s chief (and arguably only serious) competitor in this space has been Samsung, so acquiring Intel’s SSD business makes SK Hynix that much more capable of going toe-to-toe with their biggest rival.


Intel Enterprise "Ruler" SSDs

Long term, however, it remains to be seen what SK Hynix will do with the NAND fab side of Intel’s business. While it’s clear that they have big plans for SSDs and intend to leverage Intel’s existing market share and customer relationships – which is a big part of why they’re acquiring that segment first – SK Hynix doesn’t necessarily need Intel’s NAND manufacturing technology. SK Hynix is plenty capable of building more fabs on its own if it wanted more raw NAND capacity, and indeed the company has undergone several expansions. Meanwhile the companies’ technologies are significantly different, as Intel relies on floating gate tech while SK Hynix uses charge trap tech. So although the two technologies have their trade-offs, it’s very questionable whether SK Hynix wants to continue developing both over the long run.

And for both parties, the long run really is the key. NAND flash is still facing a likely dead-end in the long run, as NAND has been scaled down almost as small as it can go before leakage becomes a serious problem. 3D NAND stacking has given NAND a second wind in the interim, but there’s only so far that can go, especially in respect to reducing bit costs. Which is a big part of the reason why Intel developed 3D XPoint to begin with, as the technology doesn’t suffer the same scalability restrictions. So although Intel is getting out of the NAND game, they are still very much in the storage game over the long run, now focused on a non-volatile memory technology that is expected to scale much further in the future.

Speaking of the future, Intel has also stated that they will be investing the expected proceeds from the sale into some of their other non-core, forward-looking businesses. Intel’s 5G, AI, and edge efforts are all slated to benefit from the sale, and all are markets that Intel is priming for potentially extreme growth over the coming years.

In the interim, however, the next step will be up to regulators. SK Hynix’s acquisition will need the approval of American, South Korean, and Chinese regulators, which the companies expect to take around a year – and at which point SK Hynix can start the actual acquisition. Meanwhile Intel is set to announce its Q3 earnings this Thursday, at which point we may hear a bit more about the deal from Intel’s perspective. SK Hynix’s own earnings call will follow in a couple of weeks, on November 3rd.

Source: SK Hynix & Intel

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  • James5mith - Tuesday, October 20, 2020 - link

    Don't care. Just want Alder Stream Optane 2.0 NVMe PCIe4.0 drives this year.
  • romrunning - Tuesday, October 20, 2020 - link

    Seconded!
  • 0mnibuss - Tuesday, October 20, 2020 - link

    Would love to see this and Micron's version, have to worry about power and heat. But I don't see speed as a roadblock.
  • Unashamed_unoriginal_username_x86 - Tuesday, October 20, 2020 - link

    This might be the worst thing in tech news, people contributing nothing and just complaining about things entirely unconstructively. Saying that won't even do anything, Intel's probably decided approximately when they're launching anyway.
  • ballsystemlord - Tuesday, October 20, 2020 - link

    Do you want to see the prices?
  • ichaya - Wednesday, October 21, 2020 - link

    TBH, Mobile SoCs with Optane when?
  • Billy Tallis - Wednesday, October 21, 2020 - link

    Mobile SoCs with Optane won't happen, or won't matter, because Intel can't do mobile SoCs worth a damn. Somebody else might eventually be able to do a mobile SoC with 3D XPoint support depending on what Micron does with 3DXP long-term. But for now, there's not much indication that 3DXP can do anything interesting when constrained to a mobile-friendly power envelope.
  • ichaya - Wednesday, October 21, 2020 - link

    One of the first uses of 3D XPoint was in laptops as swap/cache, so I think you might be jumping the gun a bit. I could see 3D XPoint helping with faster startup, NV data storage and as swap/cache for all sorts of devices because of it's NV and performance properties.
  • Billy Tallis - Thursday, October 22, 2020 - link

    I'm not jumping the gun, I'm just going off my own power measurements. Intel's Optane cache modules aren't super low power devices. They are still about twice as efficient as the best flash-based NVMe SSDs (SK hynix P31) for random reads, but for other workloads and for idle power those Optane modules aren't great. So far, no Optane product has demonstrated power characteristics that indicate 3DXP would be suitable for mobile/smartphone usage, and Intel's definitely not going to prioritize energy efficiency over performance for future generations.
  • ichaya - Friday, October 23, 2020 - link

    Sorry to link to your article, but the most relevant article here would likely be: https://www.anandtech.com/show/12512/the-intel-opt... and you'll have to excuse my wishful thinking about Optane in low power situation. Thank you for the replies & articles.

    Optane seems ideal for a compiler cache for my desktop use case, so looking forward to any 800p and/or H10 successors in the consumer market. I'm not sure if the H10 will fully work with any AMD board :(

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