NEW YORK, May 10, 2026, 14:04 EDT
- Micron’s market cap has jumped past $850 billion, lifted by surging demand for AI and a sweeping rally in chip stocks.
- Memory chips, once viewed as just another commodity, have shifted into the spotlight as essential AI infrastructure.
- There’s the risk: memory is notorious for its ups and downs, and sooner or later, supply could meet demand.
Micron Technology’s stock jumped, recently changing hands at $746.81 and lifting the company’s market cap to around $853 billion. Investors are rotating into memory-chip names, stretching the AI trade out past Nvidia’s processors and into DRAM, NAND, and high-bandwidth memory—the latter a key ingredient for powering AI chips.
The rally is significant right now because AI workloads are chewing through more memory as companies transition models from training to inference—the phase where the systems actually respond to user prompts. That kind of demand calls for quicker access to heftier data sets, putting Micron, along with Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, in a stronger spot to command higher prices.
Micron stands out as one of the top beneficiaries. According to The Wall Street Journal, semiconductor stocks tacked on roughly $3.8 trillion in market cap over the last six weeks, and Micron joined peers in delivering record profits and upbeat forecasts.
Micron’s March earnings call gave investors plenty of reasons to act quickly. The chipmaker reported quarterly revenue that almost tripled versus last year, and posted all-time highs for DRAM, NAND, and HBM sales. DRAM handles the main processing memory in servers and computers, while NAND powers storage in everything from devices to data centers.
CEO Sanjay Mehrotra isn’t mincing words when it comes to AI’s impact. “Memory is a strategic asset,” he told Wccftech, stressing that artificial intelligence demands “more memory” and “faster performance memory” for its potential to be realized. Wccftech
Another issue: supply. Mehrotra describes memory supply as “very tight”—a situation that’s not easy to reverse, as per the same report. For investors, that’s the sweet spot. Tight supply tends to support prices longer than previous memory cycles managed. Wccftech
This week, Barron’s noted Micron broke through the $700 billion market cap milestone, as investors bet AI-driven demand might smooth out the memory business’s usual ups and downs. Shares surged in April and the first stretch of May, then another strong print nudged the valuation even higher.
But here’s the rub: memory is notorious for wild swings. Whenever Samsung, SK Hynix, Micron, or competitors in China ramp up output too quickly, prices can go south fast. Bloomberg opinion’s Jonathan Levin pointed out this week that the AI chip frenzy might be overlooking that very cycle.
Right now, Micron isn’t getting the usual commodity-chip treatment from investors. The company’s caught up in a tight supply dynamic, one that cuts across AI servers, cloud data centers, and premium devices. Every scrap of information on pricing, HBM shipments, or capex seems to matter more than it typically would.
Now comes the execution challenge for Micron. Investors are already pricing in a lengthy AI memory boom, but the company needs to actually deliver: ship enough premium memory, defend margins, and steer clear of the kind of supply overflow that has hit this industry in the past.