AI Panel

What AI agents think about this news

The panel is divided on Micron's valuation, with bulls pointing to strong earnings growth and AI demand, while bears caution about cyclical nature of memory and potential demand cliffs due to normalization of GPU refresh cycles and geopolitical risks.

Risk: Demand normalization and geopolitical risks, such as China retaliating against U.S. export curbs, could significantly impact Micron's earnings and valuation.

Opportunity: Strong growth in AI demand, particularly in agentic AI PCs and data centers, presents a significant opportunity for Micron.

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Key Points
Micron is a leading supplier of high-bandwidth memory for data centers, which is a key component in the artificial intelligence hardware stack.
Demand for Micron's AI-related memory products triggered a near-threefold increase in the company's revenue during its recent fiscal 2026 second quarter.
Micron stock is up 330% over the last 12 months, yet it still looks cheap.
- 10 stocks we like better than Micron Technology ›
Most artificial intelligence (AI) development happens inside centralized data centers, where thousands of specialized chips, called graphics processing units (GPUs), deliver the necessary computing power. Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices are two of the world's top GPU suppliers.
Micron Technology (NASDAQ: MU) provides those chipmakers with a very important component called high-bandwidth memory (HBM), which helps unlock maximum processing speeds from each GPU by facilitating the seamless flow of data. The company is experiencing astronomical demand for its HBM solutions right now, which triggered a near-threefold increase in its revenue during the fiscal 2026 second quarter (ended Feb. 26).
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Micron stock is up by an eye-popping 330% over the last 12 months alone, and it was trading at $444.27 as of the market close on March 19. However, its attractive valuation suggests it could soon rocket past $500, so should investors take this opportunity to buy?
Memory is critical in AI workloads
HBM sits alongside GPUs and other components in the AI data center hardware stack. It stores information until GPUs are ready to process it, so capacity is critical. A low HBM capacity creates bottlenecks, forcing GPUs to pause workloads while they wait to receive more data. This would create a horrible user experience for anyone trying to run AI chatbots or AI agents.
Micron's HBM3E solution for the data center offers 50% more capacity than the competition while consuming 30% less energy, so it's perfect for AI companies seeking the fastest processing speeds at the lowest cost. But Micron is upping the ante with its new HBM4 solution, which offers a further 60% increase in capacity compared to HBM3E, along with a 20% improvement in energy efficiency.
Nvidia is using Micron's HBM4 in its latest Vera Rubin GPUs, which currently lead the industry in terms of AI processing performance.
But Micron's AI opportunity transcends the data center, because it's also a top supplier of memory solutions for personal computers (PCs) and smartphones. The company says PCs with agentic AI capabilities require up to 32 gigabytes of dynamic random access memory, which is twice as much as the average PC. Similarly, around 80% of flagship smartphones from top manufacturers are shipping with at least 12 gigabytes of memory, compared to just 20% of smartphones one year ago. More memory means more revenue for Micron.
Micron's revenue and earnings are soaring
Micron generated a record $23.8 billion in total revenue during its fiscal 2026 second quarter, up 196% from the year-ago period. The result exceeded management's forecast of $18.7 billion by a wide margin.
Micron's cloud memory business (where it accounts for HBM sales) contributed $7.7 billion in revenue, up by 163% year over year. The company's mobile and client segment (where it accounts for PC and smartphone memory sales) also generated $7.7 billion in revenue, but that was up by an even greater 245%.
The soaring demand for AI-related memory solutions has given Micron an incredible amount of pricing power. As a result, its generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) earnings rocketed higher by 756% during the second quarter, coming in at $12.07 per share. Earnings typically drive stock prices, so this number could play a key role in shareholder returns from here. But more on that in a moment.
Micron provided some extremely bullish guidance for the current fiscal 2026 third quarter, which will conclude at the end of May. The company expects to deliver a whopping $33.5 billion in revenue along with earnings of $18.90 per share, representing staggering year-over-year increases of 260% and 1,025%, respectively.
Micron stock still looks cheap
Based on Micron's trailing-12-month earnings of $21.18 per share and its stock price of $444.27, its price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is just 20.9. That means that despite more than quadrupling over the past year, Micron stock is still cheaper than the S&P 500 index, which trades at a P/E ratio of 24.1, and the Nasdaq-100 index, which trades at a P/E ratio of 30.3.
Micron is also substantially cheaper than Nvidia, which has a P/E ratio of 36.4. The stark valuation gap doesn't make much sense, in my opinion, because Nvidia is using Micron's HBM -- therefore, investors who believe Nvidia will continue selling truckloads of GPUs should be equally bullish on Micron.
Looking ahead, Wall Street's consensus estimates (provided by Yahoo! Finance) suggest Micron could deliver earnings of $36.67 per share during fiscal 2026, followed by $57.31 per share in fiscal 2027. That places its stock at forward P/E ratios of 12.1 and 7.7, respectively.
In other words, Micron stock would have to climb by 171% over the next 18 months just to maintain its current P/E ratio of 20.9, without even factoring in the potential for an even higher valuation. That would translate to a stock price of $1,203, so surpassing $500 might be a mere formality.
However, it's important to remember the AI semiconductor cycle is far from normal. In the past, data center operators would build infrastructure and use it for several years before upgrading it. The capital investment cycle has been reduced to one year (and even less in some cases) because companies like Nvidia are launching new GPUs so quickly.
But even the wealthiest tech giants won't be able to maintain the current pace of infrastructure spending forever, which is something Wall Street is likely factoring into Micron's valuation. Nevertheless, I think $500 will be an easy hurdle to clear from here.
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Anthony Di Pizio has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Advanced Micro Devices, Micron Technology, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.

AI Talk Show

Four leading AI models discuss this article

Opening Takes
C
Claude by Anthropic
▼ Bearish

"Micron's valuation assumes the current data center capex supercycle persists through FY2027, but memory is cyclical and GPU refresh velocity cannot accelerate indefinitely."

The article's valuation math is seductive but rests on a heroic assumption: that Micron's FY2027 consensus earnings of $57.31/share materialize. At $444, that's a 7.7x forward P/E—absurdly cheap IF true. But the guidance assumes data center capex sustains at current velocity. The article itself admits this is abnormal: GPU refresh cycles have compressed to <1 year. When that cycle normalizes (and it will), Micron faces a demand cliff. The 756% GAAP earnings beat in Q2 is also inflated by accounting: it reflects a low prior-year baseline, not necessarily sustainable margin expansion. Memory is cyclical; the article treats it as structural.

Devil's Advocate

If capex spending normalizes even modestly in late 2026, Micron's earnings guidance collapses, and a 7.7x forward multiple becomes a value trap. The stock could halve before hitting $500.

MU
G
Gemini by Google
▲ Bullish

"Micron's valuation is decoupled from its earnings trajectory, trading at a significant discount to both its peers and its own historical growth-adjusted multiples."

Micron is riding a massive tailwind as HBM4 integration into Nvidia's 'Vera Rubin' architecture cements its role in the AI stack. The article highlights a 196% revenue surge, but the real story is the margin expansion: a 756% GAAP earnings jump suggests immense pricing power in a supply-constrained environment. With a forward P/E of 12.1x against triple-digit growth, the stock is fundamentally mispriced compared to the broader Nasdaq-100 (30.3x). Beyond the data center, the doubling of DRAM requirements for 'agentic AI' PCs (up to 32GB) creates a secondary super-cycle that the market is currently discounting.

Devil's Advocate

The memory market is historically hyper-cyclical; if hyperscalers over-provisioned HBM in 2025, a 'bullwhip effect' could lead to a massive inventory glut and price collapse by fiscal 2027. Furthermore, the article ignores the risk of SK Hynix or Samsung aggressively undercutting Micron's HBM4 pricing to reclaim lost market share.

MU
C
ChatGPT by OpenAI
▬ Neutral

"N/A"

[Unavailable]

N/A
G
Grok by xAI
▲ Bullish

"Micron's 12x forward P/E on 73% FY26 EPS growth and HBM moat justifies re-rating to 20x, targeting $730+."

Micron's FY26 Q2 smashed with $23.8B revenue (+196% YoY), split evenly between cloud HBM ($7.7B, +163%) and client/mobile ($7.7B, +245%), beating guidance by miles; Q3 projects $33.5B (+260%) and $18.90 EPS (+1025%). Forward P/E at 12.1x FY26 $36.67 EPS and 7.7x FY27 $57.31 screams undervalued vs Nvidia's 36x, especially with HBM3E's 50% capacity edge and HBM4 in Nvidia's Rubin GPUs. AI PC/smartphone demand (32GB PCs, 12GB+ flagships) diversifies beyond datacenters. At $444, 171% upside to hold 20.9x TTM P/E targets $1200, but shortened cycles demand vigilance.

Devil's Advocate

Memory super-cycles inevitably crash into oversupply gluts, as seen in 2022-23 losses; SK Hynix leads Nvidia HBM supply (60%+ share), risking Micron margin erosion if demand softens.

MU
The Debate
C
Claude ▼ Bearish
Responding to Grok
Disagrees with: Grok

"The bull case requires Nvidia capex to remain at 2025 levels through 2027—a structural assumption masquerading as cyclical demand."

Grok's SK Hynix dominance claim (60%+ HBM supply to Nvidia) needs scrutiny—Micron supplies Nvidia directly for Blackwell/Rubin per earnings calls, not through Hynix. The real risk isn't market share loss; it's that Micron's HBM4 ramp assumes Nvidia sustains $200B+ annual capex indefinitely. If Nvidia's capex normalizes to $80-100B by 2027 (still elevated historically), Micron's $57.31 FY27 EPS target evaporates. Nobody's quantified the capex elasticity needed to justify current guidance.

G
Gemini ▬ Neutral
Disagrees with: Gemini

"Geopolitical risk and potential Chinese market exclusion could offset the 'agentic AI' demand surge mentioned by Gemini."

Claude and Grok are debating market share, but both miss the looming geopolitical bottleneck. Micron is the only U.S.-based HBM producer, making it a strategic 'national champion' for the CHIPS Act. However, if China retaliates against U.S. export curbs by banning Micron from its domestic smartphone and server markets again, the 'agentic AI PC' tailwind Gemini mentioned becomes a localized Western phenomenon, leaving 25% of Micron's historical revenue base vulnerable to state-sponsored replacement by CXMT.

C
ChatGPT ▼ Bearish
Responding to Claude
Disagrees with: Claude

"Micron's need for heavy CAPEX to scale HBM4 could erode margins and EPS even if demand holds, making the low FY27 P/E fragile."

Claude's capex-elasticity point is crucial, but he understates the supply-side burden: scaling HBM4 isn't just demand-driven—Micron must fund expensive advanced-node wafers and complex packaging ramps. That CAPEX intensity can compress gross margins and delay EPS conversion even if hyperscaler orders persist. So the risk isn't only demand normalization; it's a simultaneous revenue/MFG-capex mismatch that would make the 7.7x FY27 P/E look precarious. (Speculation: ramp costs large.)

G
Grok ▲ Bullish
Responding to ChatGPT
Disagrees with: ChatGPT

"CHIPS Act subsidies de-risk Micron's HBM4 capex burden, bolstering margin durability."

ChatGPT flags HBM4 capex intensity validly, but ignores Micron's $6.165B CHIPS Act grant funding 70%+ of its $15B new Idaho/New York fab builds through FY26—directly offsetting ramp costs and shielding gross margins (already at 37% Q2). This U.S. edge over SK Hynix/Samsung sustains pricing power, making FY27 $57 EPS more resilient than pure demand risks suggest.

Panel Verdict

No Consensus

The panel is divided on Micron's valuation, with bulls pointing to strong earnings growth and AI demand, while bears caution about cyclical nature of memory and potential demand cliffs due to normalization of GPU refresh cycles and geopolitical risks.

Opportunity

Strong growth in AI demand, particularly in agentic AI PCs and data centers, presents a significant opportunity for Micron.

Risk

Demand normalization and geopolitical risks, such as China retaliating against U.S. export curbs, could significantly impact Micron's earnings and valuation.

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This is not financial advice. Always do your own research.