However, the Cambridge-based business saw shares slide in early trading after highlighting memory shortages. The company is among a raft of technology manufacturers to use Dram (dynamic random access memory) hardware in its products. The issue has been largely driven by memory companies diverting their manufacturing capacity to AI data centre operators, who have seen soaring investment. Eben Upton, chief executive of Raspberry Pi, said: “I am delighted by our standout performance in 2025, reflecting the flexibility and resilience of the Raspberry Pi business model, and the accelerating adoption of our compute platforms by volume OEM (original equipment manufacturers) customers. “Despite a challenging memory supply environment, our supply chain discipline has enabled us to meet expanding customer demand.”Shares were down 7.7% on Tuesday morning.
Source: The Times January 13, 2026 11:48 UTC