New York, May 8, 2026, 10:13 EDT
Roundhill Investments’ Memory ETF (DRAM) is raking in eye-popping inflows—more than $5 billion since its April 2 debut. Just Thursday, $1.1 billion landed in the fund as investors hunt for ways to play the memory chips powering artificial intelligence. DRAM crossed the $1 billion asset mark in only 10 sessions. CNBC, citing Goldman Sachs, notes that only a few ETF debuts—think spot bitcoin funds, LQD, GLD, and JPMorgan’s BBCA—have ever drawn assets this quickly.
Memory has turned into one of the most critical pressure points for AI supply chains. High-bandwidth memory, or HBM, feeds data quickly to AI chips. DRAM manages the quick, temporary workloads. For storage, NAND flash and SSDs stockpile data for servers and PCs. Roundhill says its fund is targeting these key memory areas as demand from AI training and inference surges.
U.S. investors after hard-to-reach stocks might find DRAM a simpler entry point. Roundhill lists Micron Technology among the fund’s main positions, along with South Korean memory heavyweights Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix.
Approaching 10 a.m. in New York, shares of the ETF were trading at $50.59, marking an 8.7% jump for the session with volume topping 9 million, according to market data. Micron followed suit, joining the rally. VanEck Semiconductor ETF and iShares Semiconductor ETF both advanced as well, though their gains weren’t as sharp—underscoring just how focused the memory trade has become.
“Memory has been identified as the clear AI bottleneck and there’s a shortage of these chips that’s going to last not for a quarter but multiple years,” Roundhill CEO Dave Mazza told CNBC. The report also notes DRAM inflows have clocked 23 consecutive sessions since launch, and the ETF is up about 70%. Ubirata News
Mazza echoed that approach at launch, saying, “Memory is moving to the center of the AI ecosystem.” He noted that demand for high-performance memory has become “a key constraint” for AI, and underscored that broad semiconductor funds just don’t deliver the same targeted exposure. PR Newswire
This fund is comfortable taking a big swing. Roundhill’s launch fact sheet shows Samsung with a hefty 24.99%, SK Hynix close behind at 24.22%, and Micron not far off at 23.83%. The remaining companies—Kioxia, Sandisk, Western Digital, Seagate, Nanya Technology, and Winbond—hold much smaller slices. As the sheet explains, those allocations account for both direct stock and total return swaps, the latter allowing the fund to track share moves without needing to own the shares outright.
Concentration is the main attraction, Mazza said. “These are two of the biggest memory companies and they’re essentially inaccessible for U.S. investors,” he told CNBC, referring to Samsung and SK Hynix. “Pick a South Korea ETF, and you’re stuck with a lot of names you likely don’t want. Go for a semiconductor ETF instead and companies like Micron barely move the needle in the weighting.” Ubirata News
ETF analysts aren’t holding back. Todd Rosenbluth, VettaFi’s head of research, told InvestmentNews that DRAM stands out as “one of the most successful ETF launches in history.” He pointed out how rare it is to cross $1 billion this quickly—something he says usually only happens with either a huge seed investor behind the scenes or demand on the scale of the spot bitcoin ETFs. Eric Balchunas at Bloomberg Intelligence didn’t mince words, calling the fund’s rapid climb “beyond shocking,” as cited in the same article. InvestmentNews
Options activity caught the attention of traders Thursday as more than 90,000 DRAM options contracts were traded, according to CNBC. Call options—giving holders the ability to buy at a set price—outpaced puts by nearly two to one, signaling a clear tilt toward bullish positioning. Puts provide the right to sell.
The rally didn’t lose much steam, despite DRAM’s 2.03% slide on Thursday. TipRanks data shows the ETF remains up 27.73% over five days, with gains reaching 45.64% since launch. TipRanks flagged Thursday’s dip as a potential opening for investors interested in memory, but wary of betting on individual chip stocks.
But there’s a catch. Roundhill’s own fact sheet points out the risks: memory stocks can jump or drop quickly—volatile pricing, supply snags, export crackdowns, expensive R&D, unexpected tech shifts. The ETF stays concentrated; it’s all-in on one corner of the market, with a hefty allocation to South Korea. If memory prices slip, government policy pivots, or AI budgets tighten, this fund could take a harder hit than chip ETFs with broader exposure.
At this point, DRAM sits at the center of a bigger debate: is the AI frenzy enough to keep memory supply tight and cash flowing? What matters isn’t really ETF inflows. It’s chip pricing, fresh production capacity, and whether customers keep buying the unflashy, critical memory that powers AI chips.