Micron Technology
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What we want to see tonight is EPS > $10.50. Too hard to say what they will report beyond that. Potential for over $11.
Revenue > $22B
Guide-id be happy with anything +4B over the Q2 actual and an EPS +$3.50 over the Q2 actual. say circa $26B/$14...Their Guide was $18.7B and $8.40 EPS so the above would be a colossal beat.
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Results are in. 24b and $12 eps. The guide is $33.5b and $19. No other way to describe it but.

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All you have to know really-from prepared remarks .For context, this isn't a 'we are sold out for 2026'. The SCA is a 5 year supply contract. Micron won't say but it points to Nvidia with 'many other SCAs are in progress'. I would speculate that pretty soon it's al going to be sold out for years.
The language used is intentional. One can interpret 'foreseeable future' however they choose depending on bias. My interpretation is 'years'. The fact remains all planned greeenfield sites globally, across all manufacturers will see bit growth in the 25-30% range whilst demand is 100% greater at least on the same annual basis. And this does not take into account level 3 and level 4 autonomous vehicles nor robotics which are coming and will need significant memory (edge devices).
Broadly speaking-if we are in a constrained environment we can expect ASP to continue to move up in the 50% range annually and coupled with bit growth of 20-25% and better yield (lower cost), the result is 70-80% revenue growth, margin growth and operating leverage continuing for the foreseeable future.
Of course if you don't believe spending on data centres will continue, we've peaked.



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686% growth in net income
195% increase in RevenueFwd PE is around 4!
I agree that Data centre(racks) may not be the biggest long term driver. Edge cases are likely to be larger opportunities

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Hi Al,
The same market priced the stock at $90 a year ago so it's really all you need to know about how efficient it is at times. The current situation is, and not too dissimilar to nvidia, they think it's peaked and the party is over. I think they are wrong and not slightly wrong either. The SCA 'with a very large customer' is an industry first and changes the landscape by giving certainty to Micron that a customer is contractually locked-in to buy large quantities for 'years'(5 in this case). That is not a trivial development. And let's face it, others will now get worried and also lock in long term deals or face exclusion.Remember two weeks ago when Jensen said 'we have secured our supply chain'

I am highly confident we won't stay at these levels for long. Analysts will certainly update their models this week as well.
The deal would look something like this:
Core Deal Structure
Size & Term: ~$100âŻ-$130 billion over 5 years, covering HBM4e, HBM3e, and potential HBM5 supply for NVIDIAâs Vera Rubin AI and future GPU platforms.
Payment & Guarantees: NVIDIA commits to minimum annual purchase volumes (~$25âŻbillion/year). Payments include base contract pricing plus potential escalators tied to wafer costs or memory market spot-rate increases. Shortfalls in volume may trigger penalties or make-good clauses to protect Micron.
Benefits:
For NVIDIA: Secures long-term HBM supply at hyperscale, ensures priority access, and hedges against extreme spot-market volatility.
For Micron: Guarantees $130âŻbillion revenue over five years, improves production planning, and shares some market risk with a major customer.
Flexibility & Technology Alignment: Volumes and HBM generations may adjust over the contract to match AI demand growth, with co-optimisation of HBM designs for NVIDIA GPUs. -
Hi Al,
The same market priced the stock at $90 a year ago so it's really all you need to know about how efficient it is at times. The current situation is, and not too dissimilar to nvidia, they think it's peaked and the party is over. I think they are wrong and not slightly wrong either. The SCA 'with a very large customer' is an industry first and changes the landscape by giving certainty to Micron that a customer is contractually locked-in to buy large quantities for 'years'(5 in this case). That is not a trivial development. And let's face it, others will now get worried and also lock in long term deals or face exclusion.Remember two weeks ago when Jensen said 'we have secured our supply chain'

I am highly confident we won't stay at these levels for long. Analysts will certainly update their models this week as well.
The deal would look something like this:
Core Deal Structure
Size & Term: ~$100âŻ-$130 billion over 5 years, covering HBM4e, HBM3e, and potential HBM5 supply for NVIDIAâs Vera Rubin AI and future GPU platforms.
Payment & Guarantees: NVIDIA commits to minimum annual purchase volumes (~$25âŻbillion/year). Payments include base contract pricing plus potential escalators tied to wafer costs or memory market spot-rate increases. Shortfalls in volume may trigger penalties or make-good clauses to protect Micron.
Benefits:
For NVIDIA: Secures long-term HBM supply at hyperscale, ensures priority access, and hedges against extreme spot-market volatility.
For Micron: Guarantees $130âŻbillion revenue over five years, improves production planning, and shares some market risk with a major customer.
Flexibility & Technology Alignment: Volumes and HBM generations may adjust over the contract to match AI demand growth, with co-optimisation of HBM designs for NVIDIA GPUs. -
It was a Trig moment, calling Rodders 'AL'
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Dan Ives(analyst) said today...The increasing demand and tight supply of memory for artificial intelligence infrastructure buildouts will prompt prices of some memory types to surge by more than 100%, according to Wedbush.
"Not surprisingly, pricing for memory continues to lift aggressively, with DRAM and NAND likely to see 1H (means first half 2026) pricing increases well into the triple digits from CQ4'25 levels, with gains for the former likely approaching 130% - 150% and the latter nearly as robust," said Wedbush analysts in a Monday investor report.
This should bode well for memory makers such as Micron Technology (MU), Seagate Technology (STX), and Western Digital (WDC).
"No one should be surprised by an improvement in memory," Wedbush said. "However, the magnitude of the spike highlights how much markets have continued to improve as Q1 has progressed and certainly fits our recent positive checks around memory and MU's robust results and guidance."
"And we believe, given both this backdrop as well as further shortfalls in supply vs. demand, that HDD vendors are looking to price their future contracts more aggressively than they have previously suggested," Wedbush noted.
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The next 4 quarters look something like
$20
$25 range
$30 range
$35 rangeSafe to say that our speculated $100 TTM EPS is highly likely. NB analysts until 4 weeks ago pegged their Nrs at $56 at the high end and sub $40 at the low end. It is not just ASP driving the growth but obviously it helps significantly. Bit growth is around 25% annualised and this is all the industry can produce until at least 2028. The demand/supply imbalance will persist for years imo given 2 quarters ago Demand over supply was circa 60% and today it is closer to 80%-the gap is widening and that is why prices are rising.
Today MU 1 yr Fwd PE is 4 with a growth rate exceeding 100% (closer to 200%) and conservatively a 5 yr CAGR of 65%.
What I find very interesting is planned Capex in calendar 26, confirmed last Q was an aggressive $25B and today they've upped this to $35B and more next year-it's clear to me they see something the market is ignoring. And what it might see as a negative (Capex) I see as a positive.
The biggest miss imo is as the data centre goggles up all this memory we have nascent markets building momentum. The edge is where the real fun begins. Robotics and mobile devices(Robots and cars)-everthing that moves will proliferate once the 'AIs' are at stage where their use becomes ubiquitous-and it will within the next 1-2 years.
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By 2030, edge AI is projected to dominate total memory demand, far surpassing datacenter use. Even with conservative assumptions, billions of devices running sophisticated AI locally could consume 5â7âŻEB(exobyytes) of high-bandwidth memory (5â7âŻmillion TB), compared with roughly 1âŻEB in datacenter. Autonomous vehicles alone (not just cars, drones robots, tablets, phones)âpotentially 100âŻmillion units worldwideâcould carry 32â48âŻGB HBM-equivalent per car, while industrial and service robots, numbering perhaps 50âŻmillion, might each need 24â32âŻGB.
Consumer devices like AR/VR headsets, tablets, and smart home devices add billions more, though individual HBM demand is smaller, collectively accounting for several exabytes.
Annual additions will be substantial: roughly 10â20âŻmillion cars and 5â10âŻmillion robots per year, each increment consuming hundreds of petabytes of high-speed memory. Even with edge memory adoption tempered by cheaper stacked DRAM and LPDDR alternatives, the rate of growth is staggering, exceeding the production scaling plans of current HBM fabs. I would use the term 'forever constrained'The wedge of demand is steep: memory requirements increase not just linearly with new devices but also with the growing sophistication of AI models, which push per-device memory higher. As a result, planned memory fabrication capacity is unlikely to keep up, creating a structural bottleneck for ubiquitous, high-performance edge AI. Which, if correct would drive prices up for years as demand continues to exceed supply.
This is my take. Whilst today the market worries about the memory party to be over soon and im thinking even MUs planned $200B expansion plans will not be enough. This plan covers 10 years. I will speculate now that by the end of next year this 200B plan becomes $400B or more.
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Micron Technologyâs decision today to repurchase up to $5.4B of its senior notes is a clear positive signal about its financial strength and discipline. Using cash rather than issuing stock shows the company is generating solid cash flow and prioritising long-term balance sheet health over short-term optics.
By reducing higher-interest debt in the 5â6% range, Micron effectively locks in a risk-free return and lowers future interest expenses, which will support margins over time.
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Just seen a report re Google developing chips that need less memory ..
The report indicated that this was behind the drops in Micron this week -
Hi C,
It's an algorithm not a chip and it's a nothing-burger. It has no impact on memory requirements whatsoever and it shows you just how ignorant the participants in the market are.
Googleâs âTurboâ narrative is intellectually lazy. The leap from âbetter AI efficiencyâ to âless memory demandâ ignores how technology adoption actually works. Efficiency lowers costs, which expands usageâbasic economics. Dumping Micron Technology on that headline assumes AI growth is fragile and linear, when itâs explosive and compounding. Itâs a textbook case of headline-chasing algos and shallow thinking masquerading as insight. No serious analysis, no nuanceâjust reflexive selling. If this is the marketâs level of reasoning, itâs not pricing risk; itâs broadcasting confusion.
And if you want to get technical....
First, the âpost rack-scale GPUâ reality: once youâre deploying clusters at that level, memory bandwidth and capacity (HBM, interconnect efficiency, etc.) are hard constraints, not optional luxuries.
Software improvements donât remove thatâthey just let you push the hardware harder. That typically increases utilisation, not reduces demand.
Second, the token growth point is the killer. If total tokens processed have exploded ~2500Ă, then a 6Ă efficiency gain is statistical noise. Youâre still looking at orders-of-magnitude net growth in compute and memory demand. The denominator is moving way faster than the numerator.
Third, these optimisations arenât new. Google and others have been shipping incremental efficiency gains for yearsâcompiler improvements, sparsity tricks, better routing, quantisation, etc. The so-called âTurboâ angle isnât some step-function event; itâs part of a continuous curve.
So the sell-off in Micron Technology assumes:
efficiency gains suddenly matter more than demand growth
and that this time is different from every prior cycle
Thatâs a weak assumption. In practice, efficiency gains + exploding demand = more total infrastructure, not less.Micron is so worried it's just about to buy another plant and repurpose it( 4 million sq feet) to accelerate its roadmap. And customers are signing 5 year supply agreements, scrambling to secure their supply chain, including Google who is a major customer. Rather than listen to the FUD look at the evidence. The company can only supply 50% of orders and > 80% margins and that imbalance is getting worse. It also completely ignores the edge device market which will be orders of magnitude bigger than data centre.
It's like the Deep-Seek moment we dont need these GPUs...oh wait.
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Thanks Adam âŚ.as always appreciate your insights

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and right on cue. Morgan Stanley today said ...

Morgan Stanley, in a client note reiterated their over weight rating and $520 price target on MU.
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They must be on this Forum

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Micronâs âmonsterâ Q3 guidance, issued in mid-March 2026, projected revenue of approximately $33.5 billion with an 81% gross margin. At the time, this was beyond strong. The guide is the strongest growth in corporate history-but it just got even better.
Analysts and consensus models likely incorporated more conservative server DRAM contract price assumptions of around 10â15% QoQ for Q2 2026 (AprilâJune calendar, microns quarter 3 covers March through May). Why, because Trendforce provide market data on what customers are paying/bidding.
Yesterday TrendForce revisions have dramatically upgraded that outlook to roughly +45% QoQ for server DRAM prices. This meaningful positive surprise implies higher average selling prices (ASPs) than previously modelled, particularly as new contracts roll into Micronâs fiscal Q3/Q4 2026 and Q1 2027.The impact could be substantial: elevated server and HBM pricing would lift revenue beyond current forecasts while expanding already-record margins further, thanks to the favourable product mix and limited near-term supply growth. Operating expenses are largely fixed whether they deliver $33B or $40B for that matter.
Modelling that ASP change we are looking at $38B revenue and $25 eps. This is one quarter not a year with a stock now at $357!
Worst case scenario-prices stabilise, best case they keep rising for the next year. They aren't going to fall and will likely rise a bit more but if we model flat ASP and just look at MUs bit growth of 25% thats a base of $100 EPS for 12 months and a 25% growth rate going fwd. With a PE of about 3.
