Overview:

Micron Technology's Q3 revenue of $41.46B crushed the FactSet consensus estimate of $35.75B, and its Q4 forecast of $50B signals that HBM memory demand for AI data centers shows no sign of cooling. During the regular session, the broader tape showed a clear rotation: real estate led all sectors at +1.4%, energy gained +1.2%, and tech sold off as investors trimmed high-growth AI exposure. Alphabet gained roughly 0.5% after S&P Global announced it will join the Dow Jones Industrial Average before

NEW YORK — The regular session told one story; the after-hours tape is telling a very different one — and for traders positioned in semiconductors, the divergence matters enormously heading into Thursday.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this session is straightforward: the rotation was real, but it isn’t panic. Money didn’t leave equities — it shuffled chairs. Real estate and energy catching a bid while Nasdaq bleeds modestly is a classic late-cycle defensive lean, not a structural exit from risk. The contrarian question worth asking: if Micron just printed a number that obliterated consensus by roughly $6 billion on revenue alone, why was the AI trade selling off before the print? That gap suggests positioning was already stretched. I’m watching the S&P 500’s 7,300 level — a close below that on above-average volume would signal this rotation has teeth. Watch Qualcomm’s open Thursday. If its 13.2% after-hours gain fades at the open, that tells you institutional conviction in the data center buildout story is shakier than the headline numbers imply.

NEW YORK, June 24, 2026 — U.S. equities closed mixed, with the S&P 500 settling at 7,358.22, down 0.1%; the Nasdaq Composite falling 0.4% to 25,476.64; the Dow Jones Industrial Average rising 0.4% to 51,848.90; and the Russell 2000 adding 0.4% to 2,986.63. Breadth leaned slightly positive, with advancers outpacing decliners across the NYSE, reflecting a session where selling was concentrated rather than broad.

Data Visual
S&P 500 Sector Performance — June 24, 2026 Close
Shows which sectors gained and lost on Wednesday, illustrating the rotation away from tech and into value and rate-sensitive sectors.
S&P 500 Sector Performance — June 24, 2026 Close
Values in %

The Rotation Is the Story — Not the Decline

Wednesday’s tape was less about the S&P 500’s seven-point dip and more about where capital is flowing. Investors trimmed high-growth AI and technology exposure and moved into sectors that have been largely ignored during the AI boom — real estate led the day at +1.4%, followed by energy at +1.2%, even as Brent crude dropped 3.8%, erasing much of the geopolitical risk premium accumulated since the Iran conflict began.

That energy-sector gain on a down-crude day deserves attention. Normally, energy stocks track oil prices with near-mechanical precision. Wednesday’s divergence suggests investors are buying the sector for yield and value characteristics, not as an oil price proxy. That is a textbook rotation signal.

The macro backdrop supported the move. President Trump announced Wednesday that Iran had confirmed no tolls, insurance costs, or other charges would be levied on commercial ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz — a development that materially reduces the geopolitical tail risk that had been pressuring shipping costs and energy supply chains for weeks. Lower oil, a resolved shipping corridor, and easing inflation expectations gave the Fed-sensitive rate trade room to breathe.

Consumer spending data also underpinned the rotation. Signs of consumer resilience pushed money toward beaten-down consumer names, reinforcing the view that the economy is slowing, not breaking. Whether the services economy can continue holding that line for the Fed remains the key macro question for the back half of 2026.

Key Stat
$50 Billion
Micron’s Q4 revenue forecast — a figure that, if accurate, would represent one of the largest single-quarter revenue prints in semiconductor history and reset expectations for HBM memory demand through year-end.

Micron Rewrites the Memory Demand Playbook

The session’s defining event didn’t happen during regular hours. After the close, Micron Technology reported Q3 revenue of $41.46 billion — a 346% year-over-year increase that crushed the FactSet consensus estimate of $35.75 billion by nearly $6 billion. Earnings per share came in well above the consensus estimate of $20.83. The stock jumped 12.4% in after-hours trading.

More important than the beat was the Q4 guidance. Micron projected $50 billion in revenue for the current quarter. That number implies the company expects to add roughly $8.5 billion in sequential revenue in a single quarter — a rate of acceleration that analysts had not modeled. The driver is clear: HBM memory chips powering AI data centers have created demand that memory manufacturers physically cannot fulfill fast enough.

For traders who followed our earlier analysis on whether Micron could hold $1,078 into its own earnings report, Wednesday’s after-hours reaction provides a definitive answer. The question now is whether the gap open Thursday holds or fades — a gap of this magnitude, on this kind of volume catalyst, often sees profit-taking within the first 90 minutes of trading.

Data Visual
Micron Technology Quarterly Revenue — Q3 FY2025 vs. Q3 FY2026
Illustrates the scale of Micron’s revenue explosion, with actual Q3 FY2026 results versus the prior year and analyst consensus, plus the Q4 forecast.
Micron Technology Quarterly Revenue — Q3 FY2025 vs. Q3 FY2026
Values in $B
Analyst Note
Louis Navellier, chairman of Navellier & Associates, called Micron’s earnings announcement “the grand finale to a stunning earnings season,” a characterization that carries weight given the Q3 revenue figure of $41.46B obliterated consensus by roughly 16%. Separately, Wall Street analysts lifted their aggregate end-of-year S&P 500 price target from 7,600 to 7,800 — implying roughly 6% upside from Wednesday’s close — though that consensus target assumes AI-driven earnings growth sustains its current trajectory.

Qualcomm, Alphabet, and the Rest of the After-Hours Card

Micron wasn’t alone in moving markets after the bell. Qualcomm surged 13.2% after its Investor Day presentation revealed a $15 billion data center revenue target and confirmed a multi-generation processor deal with Meta — a partnership that validates Qualcomm’s pivot beyond mobile chips into the AI infrastructure stack. Western Digital gained 10.4% in sympathy, reflecting how tightly the memory and storage ecosystem trades as a unit when demand signals improve.

Alphabet added roughly 0.5% during the regular session after S&P Global announced the company will join the 30-stock Dow Jones Industrial Average before Monday’s open. Index inclusion at this scale mechanically forces passive funds tracking the Dow to purchase shares, providing a technical bid that is independent of fundamental valuation. Whether big tech’s AI spending story is cracking at the fundamental level is a separate question — Alphabet’s Dow inclusion doesn’t answer it.

On the downside, Spryrx plunged 24.1% after a commercial update on its neffy nasal spray showed no new formulary additions secured for July 2026 — a stark reminder that single-product biotech names carry binary risk that broad market strength cannot cushion. Hertz tumbled more than 40% after announcing a $100 million stock offering alongside lower guidance, while Wendy’s surged 26% on viral social media momentum, a move that belongs in the category of noise rather than signal for most institutional portfolios.

The after-hours winners and losers collectively reinforce what Wednesday’s rebound attempted to signal: underlying earnings quality in the semiconductor and AI infrastructure complex remains exceptional, even as the surface-level tape suggests caution.

What Thursday’s Open Will Confirm or Deny

The S&P 500 closed below its 7,370–7,380 gap-fill support area — a level that now acts as immediate overhead resistance. A sustained move back above 7,380 on Thursday would suggest Wednesday’s weakness was positioning-driven and shallow. A continuation lower toward the 7,300 psychological level would indicate the rotation trade has more room to run, and that AI-adjacent growth names face a harder path to reclaiming recent highs.

Traders should also watch whether Micron’s and Qualcomm’s after-hours gains hold at Thursday’s open. Micron’s ability to hold a rebound when the broader tape is under pressure has been a recurring question — but Thursday’s open arrives with a fundamentally stronger earnings backdrop than any prior test. A gap fade below the after-hours high would be a near-term caution flag; a gap that holds and builds suggests the semiconductor trade is ready to reassert leadership.

The Iran Strait of Hormuz development reduces one tail risk, but it doesn’t eliminate geopolitical uncertainty from the calculus. Oil’s 3.8% drop in Brent crude is worth watching: the Iran peace trade has shown signs of running out of runway before, and a reversal in crude could quickly reverse the energy sector’s Wednesday gains.

Analyst consensus now targets 7,800 on the S&P 500 by year-end — but consensus targets have a well-documented habit of chasing price rather than leading it. The more useful number to track is 7,200: the level at which the bullish thesis begins to require re-examination.

Level / Event Value Signal
S&P 500 resistance 7,370–7,380 Gap-fill zone; reclaim on volume = bullish reversion signal
S&P 500 support 7,300 Psychological level; close below on volume resets the near-term trend
S&P 500 deeper support 7,200 Bull thesis requires re-examination below this level
Micron after-hours gap +12.4% Gap hold at Thursday open = AI infrastructure demand confirmed; fade = positioning concern
Alphabet Dow inclusion Monday open Passive fund rebalancing provides technical bid independent of fundamentals

Wednesday’s session was not a warning signal — but it was a reminder that markets rarely move in straight lines, even when the fundamental data is this strong. Micron’s numbers are extraordinary. The rotation into real estate and energy is orderly. The Iran shipping news removes a tangible risk. The open question is whether Thursday’s session confirms that institutional money is ready to step back into semiconductors on the strength of this earnings data, or whether the rotation has further to run before growth reclaims the lead. That answer arrives at 9:30 a.m. ET.


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.

James Whitfield is our pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily, covering U.S. equity futures, overnight movers, earnings releases, and the macro catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. James...