The math is stark. Micron’s shares bounced 8.5% to €819.40 on Monday, clawing back a fraction of the 20% drubbing suffered over the prior two sessions. But the recovery hasn’t erased the deeper tension: the stock is pricing in a super-cycle, while the consensus target from Wall Street sits more than 20% below where it trades. The next real test is June 24, when the company delivers its fiscal third-quarter results and investors will learn whether the record guidance of $33.5 billion in revenue – more than the entire annual turnover of a few years ago – was a forecast or a floor.
The trigger for last week’s selloff came from outside Micron, but it exposed how quickly sentiment can shift. Broadcom’s chief executive Hock Tan declined to raise the full‑year AI chip sales target in his quarterly call, and the sector took it as a signal to rotate out of semiconductor names. The iShares Semiconductor ETF tumbled 10% on Friday, its worst single day since March 2020. Marvell Technology shed over 16%. Chip stocks collectively lost roughly $1 trillion in market value. For Micron, the pain was amplified by memory’s cyclical nature – when demand wobbles at the margin, DRAM and NAND prices tend to move first and hardest.
Yet the fundamental picture remains strikingly tight. High‑bandwidth memory, the HBM stacks that feed Nvidia’s accelerators, is effectively sold out through 2026. CEO Jensen Huang confirmed that Micron, alongside SK Hynix and Samsung, has secured HBM4 qualification for Nvidia’s upcoming Vera‑Rubin platform. That certification locks Micron deeper into the biggest growth engine in chips. HBM accounted for less than 5% of total DRAM revenue in 2022; that share is expected to top 30% by 2026. The capacity shift is a zero‑sum game – every wafer dedicated to a high‑margin HBM stack is one less for smartphone modules or consumer SSDs.
The company’s own numbers illustrate the scale of the transformation. In the second quarter of fiscal 2026, revenue hit $23.86 billion, nearly triple the $8.05 billion of the same period a year earlier. Operating cash flow climbed to $11.9 billion. For the third quarter, Micron has guided to record revenue of $33.5 billion, a gross margin of roughly 81%, and adjusted earnings per share of $19.15. That single quarter would exceed the company’s entire annual revenue only a few years ago.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Micron?
Analysts, however, remain deeply split. Morgan Stanley boosted its price target to $1,050, Raymond James to $1,100, and Susquehanna to a bold $1,750. At the other end, Goldman Sachs keeps its target near $400, warning that memory cycles are far from dead. The consensus average sits around €640 – more than 21% below Monday’s closing price of €819.40. That gap is unusual: the stock has run well ahead of the sell‑side, leaving little room for error.
Technicals reinforce the sense of an overheated market. Micron’s 30‑day annualized volatility has been running at 102–103%, and the shares trade more than 50% above their 50‑day moving average. The relative strength index dipped to 61 after last week’s pullback, cooling from the extreme 85 reading that preceded the selloff. The 52‑week high of €938.70, set on June 3, now sits 12.7% above the current price. A clean break above €819 could reopen the path to that record, but a slip back below the Friday low of €755 would suggest the rebound has failed.
The crux is straightforward. Micron’s HBM capacity is already booked, its pricing power is extraordinary, and the shift toward AI‑driven memory demand is structural. But the stock now trades at a multiple that demands flawless execution. June 24 will reveal whether the company can deliver a beat that justifies the premium – or whether the next Broadcom‑style comment is all it takes to reset the narrative again.
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