Micron closed Friday at $1,132 a share, giving it a market cap of roughly $1.27 trillion. That briefly put it ahead of both Meta ($1.39 trillion) and Tesla ($1.42 trillion) on Thursday before settling back just below them by the end of the week.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
The stock has gained more than 236% in a single month. Not long ago, it spent years trading under $100 a share.
The catalyst is a memory chip shortage driven by the AI data center buildout. AI servers require far more memory than traditional hardware, and demand from Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Meta, and Oracle has left little supply for everyone else.
The shortage — nicknamed RAMageddon — is already pushing up prices on consumer electronics including Apple products and Xbox consoles. Analysts expect it to persist into 2027.
Micron delivered Q3 earnings last week that reflected the moment. Revenue hit $41.45 billion, up fourfold year-over-year. Profit climbed from $1.88 billion to $28.2 billion over the same period. For Q4, the company is guiding revenue between $49 billion and $51 billion.
The historic risk for memory chipmakers is the boom-bust cycle — building capacity takes time, and demand often fades just as new supply comes online.
Micron moved to address that concern head-on. The company announced 16 long-term strategic customer agreements across data center, consumer, and automotive segments, including deals with Nvidia and AI lab Anthropic.
Wall Street has been hunting for the next Nvidia — a public AI-linked company with staying power. Micron is currently its best answer.
CEO Sanjay Mehrotra used the earnings call to flag something beyond the AI data center story.
He said humanoid robots carry 10 times the memory of the average Level 2+ autonomous vehicle. Autonomous vehicles themselves already use five times more memory chips than a standard car. The math compounds quickly.
Mehrotra described it as “a sustained, substantial, multi-decade memory demand cycle” expected to begin in the latter part of this decade.
Bank of America estimates the global robot population could hit 300 million by 2040, with humanoid robots potentially exceeding 3 billion by 2060.
Micron’s stock still trades at around nine times forward earnings — low for a company putting up these numbers — largely because investors still see it as cyclical.
Mehrotra’s robotics comments are a direct challenge to that view. If the humanoid wave arrives just as the AI data center cycle moderates, Micron may not face a downturn at all.
The company reports Q4 earnings later this year.
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