Memory stocks fall after Google posts AI development TurboQuant

Memory stocks fall after Google posts AI development TurboQuant


Signage outside the Google headquarters in Mountain View, California, US, on Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026.

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Google’s latest research which claims to make AI models more efficient is putting pressure on memory stocks, with investors concerned the breakthrough could see a slowdown in chip demand.

On Thursday, shares of the world’s two biggest memory chipmakers, SK Hynix and Samsung, fell 6% and nearly 5%, respectively in South Korea. Japanese flash memory company Kioxia dropped nearly 6%. These moves followed falls in Sandisk and Micron in the U.S. on Wednesday. Both companies were lower in U.S. premarket trade on Thursday.

Alphabet‘s Google on Tuesday unveiled TurboQuant, a new compression method that it says could reduce the amount of memory required to run large language models by six times. The technique focuses on reducing the key value cache, which stores the past calculations of an AI model so it doesn’t have to run them again.

The technique is aimed at making AI models more efficient, a major goal of the leading labs.

Investors fear that this could reduce the demand for AI memory chips, which have been a critical component to train up huge LLMs from companies like Google, OpenAI and Anthropic.

Matthew Prince, CEO of Cloudflare, called the research “Google’s DeepSeek,” referencing the efficiency breakthroughs made by Chinese AI firm DeepSeek last year which caused a massive sell-off in tech stocks.

“So much more room to optimize AI inference for speed, memory usage, power consumption, and multi-tenant utilization,” he said in a post on X on Wednesday.

Memory stocks fall after Google posts AI development TurboQuant

However, Ray Wang, a memory analyst at SemiAnalysis, said that the research from Google won’t necessarily lead to the need for fewer chips. The value cache is “a key bottleneck to address to have better models and hardware performance,” he said.

Wang said it will be “hard to avoid higher usage of memory” as a result of improving model performance.

“When you address a bottleneck, you are going to help AI hardware to be more capable. And the training model will be more powerful in the future. When the model becomes more powerful, you require better hardware to support it,” Wang told CNBC.

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