New York, February 28, 2026, 10:22 AM ET — The market is closed.
- Micron ended Friday at $412.37, slipping 1.6%.
- Micron’s Sanand assembly-and-test facility in India has officially started commercial output, the company announced. markets.businessinsider.com
Micron Technology, Inc. said Saturday it’s kicked off commercial output at its new semiconductor assembly and testing plant in Sanand, Gujarat, touting it as India’s first facility of this kind. According to the memory-chip manufacturer, phase one is targeting more than 500,000 square feet of cleanroom space. The company delivered its first batch of locally made memory modules to Dell Technologies for laptops manufactured in India. Chief executive Sanjay Mehrotra called the milestone “a proud moment.” India’s electronics minister Ashwini Vaishnaw called it the country’s “first commercial semiconductor chip production.” Micron Technology
Micron shares lost ground Friday after U.S. inflation numbers reignited questions about how much longer rates could remain elevated, keeping chip stocks on edge as the week kicks off. Labor Department figures showed the producer price index for final demand climbed 0.5% in January, after December’s 0.4%. Compared to last year, the index was up 2.9%. Bureau of Labor Statistics
S&P Global Ratings bumped up Micron’s long-term issuer credit rating to BBB from BBB- on Thursday, maintaining a positive outlook. The agency pointed to quicker growth driven by artificial intelligence demand. The upgrade could slightly ease funding costs as Micron continues expanding its capacity. Investing.com
The Sanand facility serves as an ATMP plant — that’s assembly, testing, marking, and packaging — essentially the final stage before chips head to customers. According to The Times of India, the project’s investment clocks in at about 22,516 crore rupees and has created jobs for roughly 2,000 workers to date; the full ramp-up aims for around 5,000 direct positions. Mehrotra emphasized the importance of memory and storage in today’s computing landscape, noting they’re “particularly” vital for AI, the paper reported. The Times of India
Micron goes up against Samsung Electronics and SK hynix in both DRAM, the primary memory inside computers, and high-bandwidth memory, which AI accelerators rely on. For investors, Micron shares have become something of a proxy for data-center appetite. Still, the old risk hangs over the name: memory chip prices can swing sharply, often with little warning.
Rates are still in focus for traders. “This is another reason to be more patient with rate cuts,” said Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer at Northlight Asset Management, following the producer-price report. InvestmentNews
The India ramp isn’t exactly running smooth. A hang-up in product qualification, or changes in DRAM and NAND pricing, could stall the plant’s immediate effect and bring sector cyclicality back into focus. Higher-for-longer rates don’t help either.
The key event coming up is February’s U.S. jobs data, set for Friday, March 6, 8:30 a.m. ET. If the numbers come in hot, tech stocks sensitive to rates could feel more heat. A weaker reading, though, might put rate-cut hopes back on the table. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Micron’s fiscal second-quarter results hit this Wednesday, March 18, with the call slated for 2:30 p.m. Mountain time. It’s a date that coincides with the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting, running March 17-18—an event that might shake up sentiment for chip names as the month heads into its back half. Micron Technology