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Micron's Dip: A Great Chance to Buy Into the AI Memory Boom?
We can sum up Micron Technology’s (MU 3.71%) fiscal 2026 second-quarter results in one word. And that word contains only three letters: “Wow.”
Usually, when a company delivers blowout earnings, issues highly optimistic guidance, and raises its dividend by 30% (yes, Micron is a dividend stock), its stock soars. However, Micron’s shares declined after its Q2 update. Does this dip present a great chance to buy into the AI memory boom?
Image source: Micron Technology.
Sell the news
Investors have many adages. I think the most relevant one for the market reaction to Micron’s Q2 update was, “Buy the rumor, sell the news.” Make no mistake, though: Micron’s news was spectacularly good.
The memory chipmaker’s revenue nearly tripled year over year and soared 75% quarter over quarter to $23.9 billion. Its earnings skyrocketed 8.7x year over year and 2.6x sequentially. Micron generated $6.9 billion in adjusted free cash flow, up from $857 million in the prior year period and $3.9 billion in the previous quarter.
Micron’s latest results set new all-time highs on nearly every key front. CEO Sanjay Mehrotra said that the company expects “significant records again in fiscal Q3.” The company’s guidance backed up his statement. Micron forecasts Q3 revenue of around $33.5 billion, a 41% increase from Q2. It projects adjusted earnings per share will jump roughly 57% quarter over quarter.
Even with this astounding growth, Micron can’t keep up with demand. Mehrotra confirmed in the earnings call that the company is still only able to fulfill no more than two-thirds of the medium-term demand for some of its key customers.
Ordinarily, such a stellar update provides a tremendous catalyst for growth stocks (or any other kind of stocks, for that matter). However, Micron’s shares had already risen by more than 60% year to date. Some investors seem to have taken advantage of the opportunity to lock in profits.
Expand
NASDAQ: MU
Micron Technology
Today’s Change
(-3.71%) $-17.14
Current Price
$444.59
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$500B
Day’s Range
$421.23 - $457.20
52wk Range
$61.54 - $471.34
Volume
2.9M
Avg Vol
36M
Gross Margin
69.65%
Dividend Yield
0.10%
Some areas of concern
However, other investors could have some concerns about Micron despite its fantastic Q2 results and bullish outlook. The most significant fear is that the current supply demand imbalance that is fueling the stock’s impressive gains could suddenly reverse and turn into a supply glut.
Micron likely added to these worries by its revised fiscal 2026 guidance. The company upped its capital expenditure forecast to over $25 billion from its previous guidance of $20 billion.
Furthermore, Micron projects fiscal 2027 will “step up meaningfully” to expand capacity for manufacturing high-bandwidth memory (HBM) and dynamic random-access memory (DRAM). Management is targeting construction-related investments of more than $10 billion year over year as it builds more manufacturing sites.
I suspect that the growing anxiety related to skyrocketing energy prices and the crisis in the Strait of Hormuz is also weighing on many investors’ minds. Micron doesn’t ship memory chips through the narrow passage. However, Qatar produces around one-third of the world’s helium, which is transported through the Strait of Hormuz. Helium is critical for cooling in Micron’s manufacturing facilities.
Buy the dip?
Should investors buy the dip following Micron’s Q2 update? I think so.
To be sure, Micron is a cyclical stock. Eventually, the supply of memory will catch up with demand. However, I predict the laws of supply and demand will negatively impact Micron later rather than sooner. It’s striking to me that Micron recently signed its first five-year supply agreement. This indicates that at least one customer views the supply demand imbalance as a longer-term challenge rather than a short-term one.
Mehrotra said in the Q2 earnings call, “As AI evolves, we expect compute architectures to become more memory intensive.” He added, “AI has not just increased demand for memory; it has fundamentally recast memory as a defining strategic asset in the AI era.” If he’s right (and I think he is), Micron should have plenty of room to run.