Overview:
Micron Technology trades at $1,151.80 ahead of its June 24 earnings report, where analysts expect $33.5 billion in revenue and nearly 1,000% EPS growth year-over-year. The company's fiscal Q2 already delivered $23.86 billion in revenue — a 196% increase versus the prior year — with GAAP gross margin expanding to 74.4%. Stifel, Wedbush, and Rosenblatt all raised price targets this week, with targets ranging from $1,200 to $1,500, while Susquehanna holds the Street-high at $1,750.
NEW YORK — Micron Technology reports fiscal third-quarter 2026 earnings on June 24, and the bar has never been higher — the company’s own guidance calls for $33.5 billion in revenue and an operating gross margin of approximately 81%, figures that would have been unthinkable for a memory chip maker eighteen months ago.
The AI Memory Supercycle, Explained
Micron does not make the processors powering artificial intelligence — Nvidia does. What Micron makes is the memory those processors cannot function without. High-bandwidth memory, or HBM, is the DRAM architecture embedded directly alongside AI accelerators, and demand for it has outpaced every forecast made before the generative AI boom began in earnest. The company has capitalized on this structural shift more aggressively than any of its peers, executing a manufacturing transition while competitors scrambled.
The competitive position is meaningful. Samsung and SK Hynix remain formidable in conventional DRAM and NAND flash, but Micron has closed the HBM gap substantially and is now shipping HBM3E at scale. That matters because HBM commands significantly higher average selling prices than standard memory, which is the primary engine behind the gross margin expansion traders have watched unfold over the past four quarters. Micron’s investor relations page frames the company’s strategic focus squarely on AI infrastructure as the multi-year growth driver.
Beyond data centers, Apple’s recent decision to raise iPhone prices — which analysts have called a very positive signal for chip demand — reinforces the view that consumer device memory is recovering in parallel with AI infrastructure spending. Two demand drivers moving in the same direction simultaneously is not something Micron has enjoyed often in its history.
The Numbers Behind the Story
Fiscal Q2 2026, which ended February 26, was the quarter that made Wall Street sit up straight. Revenue came in at $23.86 billion — a 196% increase versus the same quarter last year, when Micron reported $8.05 billion. Sequential growth was equally striking: the $10.2 billion increase from Q1’s $13.64 billion represented the largest sequential dollar gain in the company’s history.
GAAP gross margin expanded to 74.4% from 36.8% a year earlier. GAAP net income reached $13.79 billion, or $12.07 per diluted share. Non-GAAP EPS landed at $12.20, beating the $9.31 consensus estimate by 31%. Operating cash flow surged to $11.90 billion from $3.94 billion in the year-ago period.
For Q3 FY2026, Micron guided to record revenue of $33.5 billion, plus or minus $750 million. Adjusted EPS is expected between $19.95 and $20.98 — implying nearly 1,000% growth from the prior year’s figure of approximately $1.71 to $1.91. The stock has responded accordingly: shares are up 756% over the past twelve months, trading at $1,151.80 as of June 20, with a market capitalization of approximately $1.279 trillion.
To put the valuation in context, that market cap now rivals some of the largest companies on earth. Whether the multiple is justified depends entirely on whether the gross margin and revenue trajectory are sustainable beyond the current AI infrastructure buildout — a question that does not have a clean answer yet. As we have noted previously in our earlier analysis of whether Micron’s valuation can justify a 7,500 S&P, the stock’s ascent has forced a broader reckoning about what tech multiples can sustain.
What the Analysts Are Saying — and What They Are Not
The analyst community is nearly unanimous, and that unanimity is itself a data point worth examining. According to TipRanks, Micron carries a Strong Buy consensus from 24 buy ratings, 2 hold ratings, and zero sells. Among 44 analysts polled by S&P Global, the consensus is also Strong Buy.
Price targets moved dramatically this week. Rosenblatt raised its target to $1,200 from $600, maintaining a Buy. Wedbush lifted its target to $1,300 from $550, citing surging NAND and DRAM pricing and strong upward EPS revisions, keeping an Outperform rating. Stifel went further still, raising its target to $1,500 from $550 with a Buy, citing AI-driven demand running well above consensus estimates. Susquehanna holds the Street-high at $1,750, issued May 29.
The lone institutional holdout is Goldman Sachs, which maintained a Hold rating on June 9. Goldman’s caution is worth taking seriously. The firm has tended to flag cycle-peak dynamics in memory stocks more accurately than its peers, and a Hold when the rest of the Street is piling into Buy upgrades is a non-trivial signal. The average price target across 26 analysts sits at $1,202.40 — implying roughly 4% upside from current levels, a modest number given the earnings catalyst three days away.
That compressed implied upside is the clearest sign that the market has already done significant work pricing in good news. The setup heading into June 24 is less about whether Micron beats — it almost certainly will — and more about whether guidance for Q4 FY2026 sustains the same trajectory. Any moderation in the forward outlook, even with a strong Q3 print, could trigger the kind of sell-the-news reaction that memory stocks have historically been prone to. The semiconductor rally context is broader, too — as covered in our piece on Intel’s 9% gap-up and what it means for the sector, the entire chip complex is trading at elevated expectations.
The Level That Matters Most Before June 24
With earnings three trading days away, the technical setup is clean but unforgiving. Shares closed at $1,151.80 on June 20, sitting just 0.13% below the 52-week high of $1,149.35 — a level that becomes a line in the sand. A confirmed break above that high before or on earnings day, sustained on volume above the 46-million-share average, would be a momentum signal that institutions are adding, not trimming, into the print.
On the downside, a post-earnings miss or weak guidance could expose a long fall. The stock has risen 756% in twelve months; mean-reversion on a disappointment could be swift and deep. The 52-week low of $103.38 is a reminder of how quickly memory cycles can turn — and how far sentiment can travel in both directions.
Macro conditions remain a secondary but real risk. Elevated PCE inflation — as examined in our recent piece on whether PCE at 4.1% threatens the current market rally — keeps the Fed in a restrictive posture, and rate-sensitive growth stocks like Micron are not immune to a hawkish repricing, regardless of how strong the earnings are.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| 52-week high (resistance) | $1,149.35 | A sustained close above this level on earnings volume confirms breakout; failure here on weak guidance is a short trigger |
| Q3 FY2026 earnings date | June 24, 2026 | Primary catalyst; watch Q4 guidance and HBM pricing commentary, not just the headline beat |
| Consensus analyst target | $1,202.40 | Only ~4% above current price — compressed upside signals market has pre-priced most of the good news |
| Stifel bull-case target | $1,500 | Requires sustained AI DRAM demand and HBM pricing power through FY2027; any demand softening invalidates this level |
| Goldman Sachs Hold threshold | No target upgrade | Goldman upgrading to Buy post-earnings would be a high-conviction sentiment shift; watch for it as a secondary signal |
Micron heads into June 24 carrying one of the most extreme earnings growth stories in the semiconductor sector’s history. The fundamentals are, by any honest measure, extraordinary. The question traders need to answer before the print is simpler than it sounds: at $1.28 trillion in market cap and 756% gains in twelve months, how much extraordinary is already in the price? That answer will be clearer by Wednesday evening — and the reaction in after-hours trading will tell you everything about whether this cycle has more to run or whether the market is starting to look past it.
This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

