Micron Technology has locked in 16 strategic customer agreements guaranteeing a minimum of $100 billion in future revenue—a clear signal that the memory industry sees itself as more than a cyclical commodity play. Yet when the company followed that announcement with a fiscal third-quarter revenue record of $41.46 billion, a gross margin of 84.6%, and earnings per share of $25.11 that crushed the $20.28 consensus, the stock ended the week with a 6.5% rout. After touching an all-time high of roughly €1,104 earlier in the session, shares closed Friday at €995.60.
The selloff, which followed a 270% year-to-date surge and an 825% gain over the past twelve months, puts the spotlight on a fundamental divergence: Has the memory market permanently broken free from its historic boom-and-bust cycles, or have investors simply priced in every possible upside?
The operational data leaves little doubt about the near-term trajectory. Revenue climbed 346% year-over-year, propelled by insatiable demand for High-Bandwidth Memory in AI data centers. Micron’s HBM4 is already in mass production for Nvidia’s Vera-Rubin platform, with the next generation HBM4E scheduled for 2027. CEO Sanjay Mehrotra told analysts that supply will not catch up with demand before 2028, implying years of sustained pricing power. For the fiscal fourth quarter, the company guided to $50 billion in revenue—six to seven billion dollars above the prevailing analyst estimate.
The strategic contracts, which lock in capacity rather than rely on spot market purchases, are designed to turn Micron into a structural gatekeeper of AI infrastructure. Barclays analyst Thomas O’Malley responded by lifting his price target 70% to $2,000, while a consensus of 30 analysts maintains a Buy rating with a $1,527 target.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Micron?
Yet not all analysts are convinced. A separate consensus, based on a European analyst panel, puts the average price target at just €920.01—a 7.6% discount to Friday’s closing level. That caution reflects a market cap that has ballooned to €1.203 trillion ($1.28 trillion) and a share price that stands nearly 1,000% above its 52-week low of €90.64. The argument is that perfection has already been discounted: after an 825% rally, even record results become a sell-the-news event.
The technical picture reinforces the skepticism. Micron’s annualized volatility has reached an extreme 108%, leaving little room for stable entry points. The stock trades 168% above its 200-day moving average, a degree of overextension that historically precedes sharp corrections when sentiment falters. The 50-day moving average at €707.86 now serves as the pivotal support level; a break below that would signal a potential trend change.
Friday’s shakeout was not confined to Micron. The entire semiconductor sector took a hit as profit-taking swept across the industry. SK Hynix, which is preparing a $29.4 billion Nasdaq listing under the ticker “SKHY” for July 10, shed 8.4% in Seoul. ASML, Marvell Technology, and Qualcomm also posted losses as geopolitical risks and stretched valuations weighed on sentiment. The synchrony of the retreat underscores that even the most compelling growth stories are vulnerable when prices have run far ahead of near-term execution.
For Micron, the next catalyst will likely come from the sector itself—further commentary on supply constraints or the HBM ramp. The company’s event calendar currently shows no scheduled dates. As long as AI-driven demand outstrips structurally limited supply, the constructive case holds. But the 50-day line now acts as the fulcrum between a re-test of the all-time high and a deeper correction. With $100 billion in locked orders and record margins, the fundamentals have never been stronger—but the price of admission has never been higher.
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