Testing CXMT chips is less about replacing Samsung, SK hynix than gaining leverage in memory price negotiations Apple's M-series chips fuse the processor and its memory into a single package, tying every device Apple sells to the DRAM market Samsung and SK hynix dominate. (Apple) When Apple raised MacBook and iPad prices by up to 20 percent last month, wiping $263 billion off its market value in a day, it blamed "unsustainable" memory prices. Then it went to Washington to ask permission to buy DRAM from a Chinese company sitting on a Pentagon blacklist.Kim Yang-paeng, a semiconductor researcher at the state-run Korea Institute for Industrial Economics and Trade, does not think Apple actually wants to buy these chips. He thinks it wants to be seen trying."From the consumer's point of view, when prices go up 20 or 30 percent, it looks like all of that is going straight into Apple's pocket," Kim told The Korea Herald. Apple, he said, can now tell a better story: that it shouldered political risk, went looking at Chinese memory and found nothing it could use.The Financial Times reported Wednesday that Apple has begun testing DRAM from ChangXin Memory Technologies for devices sold in China. Bloomberg had already reported earlier that Chief Executive Tim Cook took the case personally to Trump administration officials.The selloff showed how seriously the market took the threat. Even after Samsung Electronics reported the best quarter in its history this week, its shares fell 6.25 percent and SK hynix fell 5.68 percent on Wednesday, because investors were not pricing the record earnings. They were pricing the possibility that Korea's grip on memory had finally found a challenger.The AI memory squeezeFor most of the last two decades Apple sold memory the way airlines sell legroom. Base configurations stayed lean. Customers who wanted more paid a premium, and the premium was almost pure margin.Apple Intelligence ended that. Language models running on the device need their weights held in memory rather than pulled from storage, which is too slow, so Apple had to raise the floor on almost every product. The MacBook Air jumped from 8GB to 16GB in late 2024 with no change to its $999 price, the first time Apple had ever doubled a Mac's base memory outright.Such decisions repeated across multiple product lineups mean Apple now buys far more DRAM per device than it did in 2023. And it buys into a shortage: Contract prices rose roughly 95 percent quarter-on-quarter in early 2026, according to UBS, which expects the squeeze to last until at least late 2027. Global DRAM market share by revenue from Q1 2025 to Q1 2026. Samsung led at 38 percent in early 2026 and SK hynix followed at 29 percent, while CXMT rose to 8 percent from 3 percent a year earlier. (Counterpoint Research) Three companies supply most of that memory. Two of them are Korean. Apple, in other words, is paying soaring prices to suppliers it cannot easily replace, and CXMT is its attempt to find a fourth.China isn't ready — yetThat attempt runs into a wall, and the wall has two sides.The first is the chips. Ray Wang, who leads memory coverage at SemiAnalysis in Seoul, said Apple's testing looks "closer to early-stage qualification than a near-term move toward commercial adoption." CXMT's low-power DRAM still trails Samsung, SK hynix and Micron on the qualities Apple depends on, he told The Korea Herald — power efficiency, yield and speed.The gap shows up in the economics. CXMT sells DDR5 within 5 to 10 percent of what the three leaders charge, according to SemiAnalysis, while its cost to make each bit runs more than 30 percent higher. CXMT's LPDDR5X memory, which the Chinese chipmaker began mass-producing in 2025. It is the type of low-power DRAM that goes into smartphones and laptops. (CXMT) Bank of America also told clients on Sunday that even the likeliest target, a budget iPhone sold in China, "won't be significant," because cheap iPhones sell poorly there.The second side is Washington. CXMT sits on a Pentagon blacklist, and lawmakers have made clear they will fight any deal. Rep. John Moolenaar, who chairs the House committee on China, called a partnership with a Chinese military company "a grave mistake." Apple has been stopped here before: In 2022 it abandoned a plan to buy storage from Yangtze Memory after a senator named Marco Rubio warned it was "playing with fire." Rubio is now Secretary of State.The real target is KoreaIf the Chinese route is blocked on both sides, why did Apple pursue it so openly? Because Apple was never trying to switch suppliers. It was trying to be seen shopping.Testing an alternative, Wang said, lets Apple "signal to incumbent memory makers that it is exploring other options." In other words, the CXMT talks are a bargaining card. The card never has to be played to be worth holding, and it works precisely because Korea is winning: the more the world depends on Korean memory, the more a buyer like Apple needs leverage against it.That leaves the longer term, and here Wang is more cautious. The real Chinese challenge, he said, is a question of when, not whether, and the near term is not it. CXMT's factories already run near full, its output pre-sold to Chinese buyers, and new fabs take years to build. SemiAnalysis sees its share of global output rising only from about 9 to 12 percent by 2027.Even CXMT's blockbuster earnings, Wang said, are the cycle's doing rather than proof it has caught up: The Q1 profit surge came almost entirely from soaring memory prices, not from selling more chips or making them any cheaper than its rivals. What Korea should watch instead is the machinery underneath, the same that took solar and electric vehicles, patient state money and capacity that keeps compounding."Even as CXMT expands," Wang said, "it will remain supply constrained for at least the next two years."