The prevailing narrative around Micron Technology has shifted from cyclical commodity supplier to structural AI beneficiary — and Wall Street’s latest batch of price targets reflects that transformation in bold numbers. RBC Capital on June 15 nearly doubled its target to $1,200, joining a chorus of firms that now value the memory maker well above its current trading level. Aletheia Capital went further, setting a $1,600 target after switching from a price-to-book to a price-to-earnings model based on 2027 estimates. TD Cowen chimed in with $1,500, citing higher DRAM content per gigawatt and pricing power extending into the second half of 2027.
The underlying thesis is unusual for a sector known for violent boom-bust cycles. RBC argues the current DRAM upturn is already in its twelfth quarter — materially longer than the eight to nine quarters seen in 2014 and 2018 — and sees a credible path for another five to six quarters of expansion. The drivers include constrained supply growth through end-2027, tight cleanroom capacity, and sustained demand from generative AI, inferencing, and agentic AI workloads. The picture is one of scarcity, not oversupply.
That structural argument received a geopolitical tailwind this week. Reports of a tentative U.S.-Iran framework agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz sent oil prices tumbling nearly 5%, a direct relief for energy-intensive data centers. For high-growth technology names, the move provided an additional catalyst. Micron’s stock touched a fresh 52-week high of €976.40 on Tuesday before settling back to around €915 — still up roughly 240% year to date. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index jumped more than 5% on June 15 to a record; Micron’s gain exceeded that sector-wide move.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Micron?
The valuation debate, however, remains fierce. Despite the rally, the consensus analyst target sits at €714.70 — about 22% below the current price. The forward price-to-earnings multiple stands near 51, a steep premium for a company long viewed as a commodity supplier. The annualized 30-day volatility has surged past 100%, signaling a market that overreacts to every supply-chain headline and competitor move from Samsung or SK Hynix. The relative strength index of 64.8 (or 67.9, depending on the data vendor) suggests room remains before overheating, but the margin is narrowing.
All eyes now turn to June 24, when Micron reports fiscal third-quarter earnings. In the second quarter, the company posted revenue of $23.86 billion and operating cash flow of $11.90 billion. Management guided for Q3 revenue of $33.5 billion and non-GAAP earnings per share of $19.15. Investors will be looking for confirmation of those numbers — and more importantly, for signals on pricing discipline, demand visibility through 2027, and the trajectory of high-bandwidth memory (HBM). Micron’s HBM capacity is already sold out through end-2026.
The stakes could not be higher. Micron’s market capitalization has surpassed €1 trillion, placing it in a club few would have imagined for a memory-chip maker a few years ago. The question is no longer whether Micron is an AI company. It is whether the market has already priced in a multi-year transformation — or whether the June 24 report will mark the beginning of the next leg of a rerating that analysts believe has only just begun.
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