New York, Jan 16, 2026, 09:55 EST
Micron Technology shares rose more than 6% in premarket trading on Friday after a company director disclosed buying about $7.8 million of stock this week. The move came as Barclays, Wells Fargo and Citi lifted their price targets on the memory-chip maker. (TipRanks)
The run-up underscores how quickly money has been flowing back into memory stocks, long seen as cyclical bets, on expectations that artificial-intelligence servers will keep soaking up chips. Micron and SanDisk, along with Western Digital and Seagate Technology, were among the gainers, as investors bet higher prices for DRAM — short for dynamic random access memory — and NAND flash storage will stick. (Barron’s)
Chip optimism got another jolt a day earlier when Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co forecast 2026 revenue growth of close to 30% and capital spending of $52-$56 billion. Chief Executive C.C. Wei said customers were giving “strong signals” and requesting capacity, but he added the outlays would be “a disaster” if not done carefully. (Reuters)
In a Form 4 — an insider-trading disclosure filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission — Micron director Teyin M. Liu reported buying 23,200 shares over Jan. 13-14 in three purchases. He paid weighted average prices of $337.07, $336.63 and $337.50, spending $7,821,723 and lifting his stake to 25,910 shares. (SEC)
Liu is a former Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co executive, according to a MarketWatch report. Insider purchases can signal confidence, but they are not a forecast and directors buy for many reasons. (MarketWatch)
Barclays analyst Tom O’Malley raised his price target on Micron to $450 from $275 and kept an Overweight rating, a call to outperform, arguing 2026 would reward companies “centric to the pillars of the AI ramp”. He said quality will “ultimately rise to the top” even as the market argues about how much spending can actually land. (TipRanks)
Wells Fargo lifted its Micron target to $410 from $335 and kept an Overweight rating after updating its semiconductor industry model. The bank pointed to what it sees as early markers for AI demand and tracked wafer-fab equipment — chipmaking tools and the firms that supply them — alongside other production signals. (TipRanks)
Citi raised its target to $385 from $330 and kept a Buy rating, but it removed Micron from its U.S. Focus List, a shortlist of preferred stocks. It said DRAM pricing momentum is likely to slow in the second quarter versus the first, though it still expects supply and demand to stay balanced through 2027 because fab space is limited and AI demand remains strong. (TipRanks)
The rally has spread to SanDisk, another memory name, after analysts argued manufacturers are showing more discipline on adding capacity. Benchmark raised its SanDisk target to $450 from $260, saying restrained investment in new NAND output could help margins reach record levels as 2026 moves into 2027. (Investing)
But the memory business is still a boom-and-bust machine. If data-center spending cools, or producers loosen discipline and add capacity faster than demand, pricing can slip quickly — and that would hit earnings in a hurry.
Micron investors now have two signposts: whether insider buying continues, and whether analysts’ upbeat targets square with what the company says next about DRAM and NAND prices. For a stock that has already run hard, the margin for disappointment is thin.