The sell-off in Micron Technology shares has been brutal, but the company’s order book tells a different story. The stock has tumbled roughly 25 percent in three weeks, dragged down by a sectorwide exodus from semiconductor names that erased more than 7 percent from the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index in just two trading days. At 753.60 euros, Micron now sits 31.73 percent below its 52-week high of 1,103.80 euros, set on 25 June 2026. The annualized 30-day volatility of 102.92 percent underscores a market struggling to price the memory maker’s new reality.
Yet beneath the surface, the fundamental case has rarely been stronger. Micron has sold its entire High Bandwidth Memory production for 2026 at fixed prices — a contractual lock that removes the commodity pricing risk that has historically punished the sector. Over 56 percent of revenue now comes from data-center clients, a share that has more than doubled in a few years. The company is backing that conviction with capital expenditure plans exceeding $25 billion in the current fiscal year, earmarked for new factories in the U.S. and Taiwan.
The volatility is not without its triggers. CEO Sanjay Mehrotra sold more than $70 million in shares under a pre-arranged 10b5-1 plan, and a class-action lawsuit against Micron, Samsung and SK Hynix over alleged DRAM price-fixing has resurfaced. But analysts largely view both as noise. Investor Alpha Line, in comments to TipRanks, described the retreat as sentiment-driven rather than fundamental, noting that Mehrotra’s sale was scheduled and the lawsuit is an overhang from prior cycles.
Earnings momentum remains robust. In the fiscal third quarter, Micron reported earnings per share of $25.11 on revenue of $41.46 billion — up 345.8 percent year over year and well ahead of the $21.39 consensus. Management guided current-quarter EPS in a range of $30 to $32.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Micron?
Operationally, the company deepened its ties to the automotive sector this week by signing multi-year supply agreements with seven automakers and suppliers — Qualcomm, Hyundai Mobis, Harman, Visteon, Joynext, Denso and Astemo. The contracts, spanning three to five years, lock in pricing and volumes for infotainment, ADAS and digital cockpit memory. Since the third quarter, Micron has signed 16 such framework deals. The catch: Samsung has overtaken Micron as the market leader in automotive memory, with a 40 percent share versus Micron’s 36 percent.
To shore up its own supply chain, Micron invested $500 million in a Texas wafer plant run by GlobalWafers, coupled with a ten-year supply agreement. On the trading floor, the picture is split. Insiders sold 163,300 shares worth $152.7 million in aggregate, while institutional investors such as Enterprise Financial Services and the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund boosted their holdings by 390 percent and 24.7 percent respectively.
Wall Street remains overwhelmingly bullish. The consensus on the stock is Strong Buy, with 29 buy ratings and a single hold. The average analyst price target of $1,569.29 — roughly 1,299.51 euros — implies 84 percent upside from mid-July levels. Still, the market is testing that thesis in real time. The relative strength index sits at 41.6, signaling neither oversold nor overbought, and the next catalyst looms: earnings from South Korean rival SK Hynix, which will provide a read-across for the entire memory sector.
The real test for Micron’s “supercycle” narrative will come when the current HBM contracts wind down. For now, the company has a 2026 backlog, a $25 billion factory bet, and an installed base of AI customers that cannot afford to cut orders. The stock’s drop reflects sentiment, not fundamentals — but in a cycle business, sentiment can sometimes rewrite the rules.
Ad
Micron Stock: Buy or Sell?! New Micron Analysis from July 17 delivers the answer:
The latest Micron figures speak for themselves: Urgent action needed for Micron investors. Is it worth buying or should you sell? Find out what to do now in the current free analysis from July 17.
Micron: Buy or sell? Read more here...











