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Micron’s AI-Fueled Stock Surge: Record Earnings, Rallying Shares & What’s Next for MU
12 November 2025
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Micron Technology (MU) Stock Today: Shares Edge Higher as New York Megafab Start Slips to 2026 — What It Means for Investors (Nov 12, 2025)

Micron (NASDAQ: MU) trades higher today after fresh filings confirmed its $100B New York megafab will begin construction in 2026 with first production targeted for 2030. Here’s the stock move, the headlines, and what to watch next.


MU stock at a glance (Nov 12, 2025)

Micron shares are trading around $245.40, up ~1.8% from yesterday’s close of $241.11 as of 18:43 UTC. Today’s intraday range has been $240.94–$248.87. The rebound follows Tuesday’s pullback across semis.


The big story today: New York megafab timeline resets

Fresh public filings and local approvals show Micron’s $100 billion chip campus in Clay, New York will start major construction in mid‑2026, with the first production plant now planned to be operational in 2030—a notable slip from earlier targets. The update comes via the project’s Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) and follows county acceptance last Friday, clearing a key procedural hurdle even as the schedule extends.

New York is also pushing enabling infrastructure forward: in October, the state approved a 345‑kV underground power line to link the Clay substation to the future campus—an essential step for a project billed as the largest private investment in state history.

Why it matters: The later New York ramp doesn’t change the near‑term demand picture for Micron’s AI memory but does re‑phase where and when capacity gets built. As investors handicap supply coming online in 2027–2030, today’s filings add clarity around timing and dependencies (utilities, site work, and workforce).


Market context

Semis are firm overall: the iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) is up about 1.5% intraday, while NVIDIA (NVDA) is roughly flat. Micron’s bid today sits modestly above the group’s move.


The investment thread that still drives MU: AI memory

Beyond the construction cadence, the AI memory supercycle remains Micron’s near‑term engine. Earlier this year Micron said 2025 HBM supply was effectively sold out, with 2026 contracts moving toward completion; the company also guided to stronger revenue on AI demand.

On the product side, Micron recently sampled HBM4 and highlighted architectural choices aimed at performance and power gains—signals that its HBM3E/HBM4 roadmap stays on pace into calendar 2026–2027.


Today’s Micron headlines — Nov 12, 2025

  • Micron pushes start of $100B New York megafab to 2026; first production now 2030. Detailed in the FEIS and county filings, with site prep continuing through 2025. Takeaway: A meaningful schedule reset, but regulatory milestones are being checked off.
  • County acceptance of Micron’s FEIS last week formalizes the timeline change and keeps the project moving through required steps. Takeaway: Process risk falls as paperwork advances, even if shovels hit dirt later.
  • Related background (yesterday/this week): Coverage notes more granular timelines and a strategic tilt to accelerate Idaho capacity; reports also discuss rebalancing portions of CHIPS funding. Takeaway: Near‑term U.S. capacity emphasis leans to Idaho while New York phases stretch out.

Note: The items above are the material, time‑stamped developments tied to Nov 12, 2025. Broad opinion pieces and evergreen analysis (e.g., “Why MU is a growth stock”) also hit today across financial media, but they don’t alter the facts of the New York timeline update. Finviz


What the New York update means for the stock

  • Near‑term supply & margins: No immediate change. Micron’s AI‑centric memory mix (HBM3E/HBM4, server DRAM) remains the core earnings driver for FY26, with previously signaled strength in AI memory demand underpinning top‑line visibility.
  • Capex phasing: Investors should model shifted U.S. greenfield spend, with Idaho likely to absorb more of the early execution focus even as New York infrastructure proceeds. Micron’s broader $200B U.S. investment plan provides the umbrella for how (and where) capacity lands.
  • Policy tailwinds: State and federal actions (e.g., the approved transmission line; ongoing CHIPS incentives) remain supportive, though timelines now reflect the realities of mega‑fab construction.

Key numbers to bookmark today

  • MU price (18:43 UTC): $245.40 (+1.8% vs. prior close)
  • Intraday range: $240.94–$248.87
  • SOXX (semis ETF): +~1.5% intraday
  • NVDA: roughly flat intraday
    These figures will continue to update as markets trade.

What to watch next

  1. Any formal schedule communication from Micron aligning the FEIS milestones with capex and tool move‑in windows for New York vs. Idaho.
  2. HBM customer and node updates (HBM3E/HBM4), including qualification wins and capacity adds for calendar 2026–2027.
  3. Policy and funding cadence: Follow‑on disclosures around state/federal support tranches and enabling infrastructure.

Bottom line

Micron’s stock is higher today even as New York’s $100B project slides to a later start and 2030 first‑production date. The market appears to be treating the schedule reset as a long‑dated construction reality, while keeping the focus on near‑term AI memory demand and Micron’s HBM roadmap—the pieces that matter most for upcoming quarters.


Sources: live market data and company‑related reporting referenced throughout.

Stock Market Today

  • JPMorgan Chase Stock Valuation After 25% Annual Gain
    June 16, 2026, 10:10 PM EDT. JPMorgan Chase (JPM) stock closed at $331.14, marking a 25.3% gain over one year. Despite strong returns, its valuation is attracting scrutiny. Simply Wall St rates JPMorgan at 2/6 on valuation metrics. An Excess Returns model estimates an intrinsic value of $435.81 per share, suggesting the stock is 24% undervalued. This model compares JPMorgan's return on equity (16.96%) against the cost of equity, highlighting shareholder profit potential. However, ongoing concerns about interest rates, credit conditions, and capital requirements keep investors cautious. JPMorgan's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio remains a key metric for assessing whether current prices fairly reflect earnings. Overall, JPMorgan Chase's stock offers potential value but demands close investor attention amid market factors.

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