TL;DR
GoPro issued a going-concern warning after memory prices rose 80-115%. Revenue fell 26%. It’s exploring a sale, a defence pivot, and 23% staff cuts.
GoPro warned on Monday that there is “substantial doubt about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern.” The action-camera maker reported a 26% revenue decline in Q1 and expects to breach several loan covenants. Shares fell as much as 14%.
The cause is memory. GoPro said its earnings forecast has been “significantly impacted” by an 80% to 115% increase in memory prices. In April, suppliers informed the company of a planned reduction in memory supply that would further reduce forecasted sales. The same DRAM reallocation that is killing the cheap smartphone is now threatening to kill GoPro.
The mechanism is the one we detailed last week. Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron have redirected wafer capacity from consumer DRAM to high-bandwidth memory for AI data centres. HBM margins run at 70% or higher. Consumer DRAM margins sit between 20% and 30%. The memory makers chose the higher-margin customer. Everyone else pays more or gets less.

The 💜 of EU tech
The latest rumblings from the EU tech scene, a story from our wise ol’ founder Boris, and some questionable AI art. It’s free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now!
GoPro does not have the purchasing power to absorb the price increase. It is not Apple, which can negotiate quarterly contracts and pass costs onto consumers buying $1,000 phones. It is a sub-$1 billion revenue company whose products sell for $300 to $500 and depend on commodity memory to store high-resolution video. When memory costs double, the product becomes unprofitable.
The company has received waivers from its lender after failing to comply with loan covenants. It does not expect to have enough liquidity to meet obligations if default provisions are triggered and outstanding debt becomes due. It has a $50 million second-lien facility from Farallon Capital Management and a revolving credit facility with Wells Fargo as agent.
GoPro has engaged advisors to evaluate strategic alternatives including a potential sale or merger. It is also exploring opportunities in defence and aerospace for “new markets and product categories.” The company already announced plans to cut 23% of its global staff in April.
The defence pivot echoes Faraday Future’s robotics pivot: a consumer electronics company under financial pressure reaching for a higher-margin, government-funded market where the competitive dynamics are different. Whether GoPro’s ruggedised camera expertise translates into defence contracts is unproven.
The only near-term supply relief is coming from China. ChangXin Memory Technologies’ DRAM has been spotted inside Corsair’s retail DDR5 kits. But CXMT is also planning to convert 20% of its capacity to HBM because the margins are irresistible. The consumer memory shortage is structural, not cyclical.
The memory crisis is visible across consumer electronics. The Asus ROG NUC 16 costs $1,200 more than last year’s model, partly due to DDR5 prices. Dell hiked laptop prices 15-20% in December. Apple agreed to pay Samsung a 100% premium on LPDDR5X for the iPhone. These companies can absorb the cost. GoPro cannot.
GoPro was founded in 2002 by Nicholas Woodman. It went public in 2014 at a $3 billion valuation. The company popularised the action camera category and built a brand that became synonymous with extreme sports and adventure content. Its share price peaked above $90 in 2014. It trades below $1 today.
The going-concern warning makes GoPro the most visible corporate casualty of the AI memory reallocation. It will not be the last. Any consumer electronics company with thin margins, limited purchasing power, and dependence on commodity DRAM is facing the same calculus. The AI boom created enormous wealth for three memory makers and the hyperscalers they supply. GoPro is on the other side of that equation.

