Micron Technology (MU) shares reached an intraday high of $1,097.47 on Monday following an impressive 11% single-session rally. The surge extends the stock’s 2026 performance to approximately 245%.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
The driving force is clear: artificial intelligence infrastructure investment continues accelerating, and Micron occupies a critical position in this ecosystem.
High-bandwidth memory — the specialized memory chips powering AI servers and graphics processors — has emerged as one of the most essential components in modern AI hardware. Micron stands among just three manufacturers worldwide capable of producing HBM at commercial scale.
As Nvidia, AMD, and competing AI chip producers increase output, memory requirements per GPU continue expanding. Micron is capitalizing on both increased unit volumes and improved pricing leverage.
Significantly, industry reports suggest the company has exhausted its complete 2026 HBM production capacity through advance orders. This level of forward visibility is uncommon, explaining much of Wall Street’s growing optimism.
TD Cowen’s Krish Sankar dramatically increased his price objective, jumping from $660 to $1,500. His research highlights expectations for compelling profit margins in the upcoming June 24 earnings release.
RBC Capital analyst Srini Pajjuri elevated his target from $525 to $1,200 while maintaining a buy recommendation. Cantor Fitzgerald’s CJ Muse pushed even further, upgrading from $700 to $1,500.
Investors anticipate management commentary on HBM production capacity and customer obligations through year-end 2026, insights into AI-driven demand from hyperscale cloud platforms, and ongoing margin expansion trends.
Current Street consensus projects Q3 FY26 earnings per share of $20.21 — a remarkable 958% jump from the prior-year period. Revenue forecasts cluster around $35 billion, reflecting approximately 276% growth year-over-year.
These projections appear ambitious. However, considering current HBM pricing dynamics and supply constraints, the targets may prove realistic.
Both DRAM and NAND flash pricing continue advancing as industry-wide supply remains constrained. This trend provides additional pricing support for Micron’s business beyond HBM alone.
The relative strength index merits attention. Micron’s RSI peaked at 76 in mid-May before moderating. Currently, the indicator hovers just beneath 70 — the traditional threshold signaling overbought territory.
Earlier in 2026, MU’s RSI reached 90, a reading not witnessed since 1995. Interestingly, RSI has trended lower over recent weeks while share prices continued climbing — a pattern some technical analysts interpret as positive divergence.
The consensus Wall Street rating stands at Strong Buy — with 28 Buy recommendations and 3 Hold ratings issued over the past three months. The mean price target of $1,017.86 suggests modest downside from present levels, though several individual analyst targets now substantially exceed this average.
Competitive pressure from Samsung and SK Hynix represents a genuine consideration. Both competitors are expanding HBM manufacturing capabilities, and any supply normalization could eventually pressure pricing.
Nevertheless, the current reality remains compelling: Micron’s entire 2026 HBM production is committed, and the company reports quarterly results on June 24.
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