Micron Technology (MU) shares reached an intraday high of $1,097.47 Monday following an impressive 11% single-session rally. This surge pushes the stock’s year-to-date performance to approximately 245%.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
The driving force is clear: artificial intelligence infrastructure investments continue accelerating, and Micron occupies a pivotal position in this expansion.
High-bandwidth memory (HBM) — essential for AI servers and graphics processing units — has emerged as one of the most crucial elements in the AI hardware ecosystem. Micron ranks among just three manufacturers worldwide capable of producing it at commercial scale.
As Nvidia, AMD, and additional AI semiconductor companies increase production volumes, memory requirements per GPU are expanding. Micron is capitalizing on both elevated demand and improved pricing dynamics.
Significantly, reports suggest the company has exhausted its complete 2026 HBM production allocation. Such forward visibility is uncommon in the semiconductor industry, explaining much of Wall Street’s growing optimism.
TD Cowen’s Krish Sankar dramatically increased his price objective from $660 to $1,500. His analysis highlighted expectations for compelling profit margins ahead of the June 24 quarterly report.
RBC Capital analyst Srini Pajjuri elevated his target from $525 to $1,200 while maintaining a buy recommendation. Cantor Fitzgerald’s CJ Muse pushed even higher, upgrading from $700 to $1,500.
Investors anticipate management commentary on HBM production capacity and customer agreements through year-end 2026, insights regarding AI-driven demand from major hyperscale cloud operators, and ongoing gross margin expansion.
The Street consensus forecasts Micron delivering Q3 FY26 earnings of $20.21 per share — representing a remarkable 958% year-over-year surge. Revenue projections stand at approximately $35 billion, reflecting about 276% growth versus the prior-year quarter.
These figures are substantial. However, considering current HBM pricing trends and supply-demand fundamentals, achieving these benchmarks appears feasible.
Both DRAM and NAND flash prices are advancing as supply constraints persist throughout the memory sector. This provides additional pricing tailwinds for Micron extending beyond HBM products alone.
The relative strength index (RSI) deserves consideration. Micron’s RSI peaked at 76 during mid-May before moderating. Currently, it’s hovering just beneath 70 — the threshold commonly linked with overbought territory.
Earlier in 2026, MU’s RSI reached 90, a level not witnessed since 1995. Interestingly, the fact that RSI has been declining throughout the past month even as the stock advances could signal a bullish divergence to certain technical analysts.
MU carries a Strong Buy consensus — 28 Buy ratings and 3 Hold ratings issued over the previous three months. The average analyst price target of $1,017.86 suggests limited downside from present levels, although several individual forecasts now exceed that average considerably.
Rivalry from Samsung and SK Hynix represents a genuine consideration. Both competitors are advancing their HBM manufacturing capabilities, and any supply expansion could potentially pressure pricing over time.
Nevertheless, the latest evidence is compelling: Micron’s 2026 HBM capacity is fully committed, and its quarterly earnings announcement arrives June 24.
The post Micron (MU) Stock Soars 245% in 2026: Why Wall Street Sees $1,500 Ahead appeared first on Blockonomi.


