Micron Technology stock traded close to flat early Tuesday, slipping about 0.1% to $1,144.00 in premarket action. That small move follows one of the wildest runs in the chip sector this year.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
The stock has gained 232% this quarter alone, according to Dow Jones Market Data. It has more than quadrupled since the start of 2026.
That kind of climb has pulled in a wave of retail traders. It has also made the stock jumpy, with investors now watching for signs of a pullback.
Memory chips are a boom-and-bust business. South Korean manufacturers announced new capacity this week, and that news has some traders worried about oversupply down the road.
But Micron has been working to insulate itself from those swings. The company has been signing long-term supply contracts that lock in minimum prices.
Those contracts already cover around 40% of Micron’s revenue, and management wants that share to grow. UBS analyst Timothy Arcuri reads that as a signal Micron expects to hold gross margins at 70%-75%.
That’s down from the 85% margin Micron posted last quarter, but still far above the roughly 62% peak the company hit back in 2018. Arcuri rates the stock a Buy with a $1,625 price target.
The Wall Street average price target sits at $1,543, per FactSet. Cantor Fitzgerald and Barclays have both pushed targets as high as $2,000 in the past week.
Much of the bull case rests on artificial intelligence. Micron’s high-bandwidth memory chips feed directly into Nvidia’s AI systems, and demand there has stayed strong.
Chinese competition hasn’t dented that story much yet. CXMT, a Chinese memory maker, said in its IPO paperwork that its output remains below domestic demand, which limits its ability to supply companies like Apple.
D.A. Davidson analyst Gil Luria thinks the market is mispricing the whole AI memory trade. He told CNBC that Micron and Nvidia trade as if AI spending is about to peak, while equipment and networking stocks are priced for growth through 2030.
Luria said that gap could mean Micron is worth roughly four times its current price if AI investment keeps climbing. He pointed out Micron trades at just eight to nine times earnings, compared with 40 to 50 times for many CPU-focused chipmakers.
Micron sits well above every major moving average, a sign the longer trend is still intact. The stock is about 9.8% above its 20-day average of $1,044.12 and 166% above its 200-day average of $430.86.
That gap is wide enough that traders are watching for a short-term cooldown. The MACD indicator has already dipped below its signal line, hinting momentum is softening even as the broader uptrend holds.
The 52-week high stands at $1,255. Support sits near the 20-day moving average, with April’s swing low as the next reference point if selling picks up.
Micron also scores well on Benzinga Edge’s momentum, quality, and growth rankings. Its value score is weak, reflecting the premium investors are now paying for the stock.
The chip maker carries notable weight in several ETFs, including the Invesco S&P 500 Momentum ETF, the Invesco PHLX Semiconductor ETF, and the Global X DAX Germany ETF. Micron Technology shares were last seen down 0.11% at $1,144.00 in Tuesday’s premarket session.
The post Micron (MU) Stock: What’s Next After Its Best Quarter Ever – Analysts Weigh In appeared first on CoinCentral.


