NEW YORK, December 29, 2025, 4:09 PM ET — After-hours
- DRAM spot price data showed another daily rise for key DDR4 and DDR5 products.
- Micron’s next quarterly dividend goes to holders of record at Monday’s close.
Micron Technology (MU) shares rose 3.4% on Monday to end at $294.40, rebounding from an early slide and finishing near the session high. The stock traded between $278.51 and $294.45 on volume of about 25.6 million shares, market data showed.
The move matters because Micron sits in a pricing-driven corner of semiconductors, where small shifts in memory prices can flow quickly through earnings. Investors have been watching for signs that supply remains tight as AI-related demand pulls capacity toward higher-end products.
A key focus is high-bandwidth memory, or HBM — a stacked form of DRAM used alongside AI processors in data-center servers. The market has treated HBM availability and pricing as a proxy for how fast AI infrastructure spending is translating into component demand.
The broader tape was softer. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF slipped 0.4% and the Invesco QQQ Trust, which tracks the Nasdaq 100, fell 0.5%, while the iShares Semiconductor ETF edged down 0.2%; Nvidia ended down about 1.2%.
Data from DRAMeXchange showed spot prices — transactions for immediate delivery — posted fresh gains on Dec. 29 across several DRAM products. Spot prices for DDR5 16G and DDR4 16Gb chips rose about 1.4% and 0.9% on the day, while DDR4 8Gb gained about 0.5%, the data showed. DRAMeXchange
Tightness has also shown up in downstream pricing. Tom’s Hardware reported that one U.S. supplier is listing a 2-terabyte DDR5 server memory kit for roughly $39,000, citing a broader DRAM shortage and sharp recent price increases. Tom’s Hardware
Micron’s dividend calendar also lands on a key date at year-end. The company said its board declared a $0.115-per-share quarterly dividend payable on Jan. 14, 2026, to shareholders of record as of the close of business on Dec. 29. Micron Technology
Micron last updated investors on Dec. 17, when it forecast second-quarter adjusted profit of about $8.42 a share — nearly double what analysts were expecting at the time — as memory prices climbed amid tight supply, and it raised its 2026 capital spending plan to $20 billion. Summit Insights analyst Kinngai Chan said then that “AI-related demand remains the biggest driver for Micron.” Reuters
That thesis leans heavily on execution: adding supply for higher-margin HBM and server memory without flooding more traditional markets such as PCs and smartphones. Memory makers have historically seen margins swing sharply when new capacity hits an already cyclical market.
In the near term, investors will be watching whether higher spot prices translate into contract pricing, which is set in longer-term agreements with large customers and tends to move more slowly. Any signals from big buyers about delivery schedules and inventory levels can quickly reset expectations.
For Micron, the next debate is how long the tight-supply environment can persist into 2026 while the company ramps spending and expands output. Any evidence that shortages are easing would likely cool the trade that has favored memory names.
Monday’s reversal from an early low underscored how sensitive MU has become to memory-price narratives. The next scheduled cash event for shareholders is the company’s mid-January dividend payment.


