New York, March 9, 2026, 05:45 EDT
- Micron shares dropped roughly 7% ahead of the open, with U.S. equity futures also under pressure.
- Micron is set to join the S&P 100, S&P Dow Jones Indices said, with the change taking effect March 23.
- Micron’s results land March 18, and investors are zeroed in on what they reveal about AI-fueled appetite for memory chips.
Micron Technology shares fell sharply before the bell Monday, dropping roughly 6.7% to $370.30. U.S. stock index futures lost more than 1% and oil prices spiked, turning up the heat on risk assets. Reuters
Timing’s critical here. Micron faces a pivotal stretch: an index reshuffle coming up could trigger buying by certain funds, plus an earnings release that will gauge if the memory sector’s rally can keep running.
The S&P 100, pulling from the bigger S&P 500, focuses on 100 major U.S. names and serves as a popular gauge for index fund managers. When a stock gets added, passive flows typically shift to accommodate the newcomer.
S&P Dow Jones Indices plans to slot Micron into the S&P 100 before the bell on March 23, putting it in with Lam Research, Applied Materials, and GE Vernova. PayPal, AIG, MetLife, and Target will get the boot, according to TheFly. TipRanks
Micron’s results land March 18. According to a recent commentary on Nasdaq.com, analysts see revenue having more than doubled. The piece also points out that what management says about the coming quarter could set the tone for where the stock heads next. Nasdaq
Micron, headquartered in Boise, Idaho, produces memory chips for phones, PCs, and data centers. Its foothold in high-bandwidth memory (HBM)—a speedy DRAM variant that sits close to AI accelerators and shuttles data rapidly—has made the company a favorite with investors.
Tough macro setting: Oil hovered close to $120 a barrel, Reuters said, while volatility picked up with the Iran war grinding on. Nasdaq 100 futures slipped around 1.65% early. Reuters
Index committees usually stick with well-known companies. Analyst Melissa Roberts pointed out that the committee typically picks “migrators” from other indices instead of fresh faces, according to MarketWatch. MarketWatch
Still, the trade isn’t one-way traffic. Morningstar’s William Kerwin, quoted by Nasdaq.com, doesn’t see a lasting competitive edge for Micron in what he calls a commoditized memory market. The analyst put a $225 target on the stock, warning that Micron looks exposed whenever the supply cycle shifts direction. Nasdaq