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Micron shares fall after AI-fuelled rally despite blowout earnings

Micron shares fall after AI-fuelled rally despite blowout earnings
Rivanshi Rakhrai
Jun 26, 2026, 09:45 A.M.

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Micron (MU)

Buy MU. Earnings were a true beat with extreme margin strength (85% gross, 81% operating) and a clear supply-demand imbalance: customers committed $22B and Micron now expects the memory shortage to last beyond 2027. The sell-off looks like AI capex “cost anxiety” hitting the whole group, not a Micron-specific deterioration.

Key Risk: AI spending gets delayed or cut, and memory demand normalizes faster than Micron’s >2027 shortage outlook.

ASML (ASML)

Sell ASML. The article shows the whole semiconductor complex de-risking on AI infrastructure cost concerns, and ASML is the most “capex-tied” name here. Even with strong fundamentals, when investors fear AI budgets, they usually hit the equipment leaders first, before the memory/compute demand story fully breaks.

Key Risk: AI capex fears prove wrong and ASML order momentum accelerates instead of slowing.

  • Micron shares fell after a sharp AI-driven rally despite strong quarterly earnings.
  • Revenue surged as demand for data-centre memory chips remained exceptionally strong.
  • Investors remained cautious over rising AI infrastructure spending.

Micron Technology's MU shares fell sharply on Friday, giving up part of the gains recorded earlier in the week despite the memory chipmaker reporting stronger-than-expected quarterly results.

The stock declined nearly 5% in premarket trading as weakness spread across the broader semiconductor sector.

Other US chipmakers also traded lower, with Intel down just over 3%, Sandisk falling 5%, Arm shedding 4%, and Marvell declining 3.7%.

The decline came as investors remained cautious about the rising costs associated with artificial intelligence infrastructure, triggering a broader sell-off across global semiconductor stocks.

Semiconductor stocks under pressure worldwide

The weakness extended beyond the United States.

In Europe, ASML fell 2.2%, Infineon declined 3.7%, ASM International lost 2.8%, ST Microelectronics dropped 3.3%, and Be Semiconductor slipped 2%.

In Asia, Japanese conglomerate SoftBank led regional losses, plunging more than 12%.

The broader pullback followed a strong rally in AI-related semiconductor companies, even as Micron delivered robust financial results and issued an optimistic outlook.

Revenue beats expectations

MU reported third-quarter revenue of $41.46 billion, compared with $9.3 billion in the same period a year earlier.

The result exceeded analysts' expectations.

Adjusted earnings reached $25.11 per share on revenue of $41.5 billion, representing a 346% year-on-year increase.

Adjusted gross margin stood at 85%, while adjusted operating margin reached 81%.

The company also projected revenue of around $50 billion for the current quarter, compared with $11.3 billion in the corresponding period last year.

Micron also said customers had committed $22 billion to secure future memory chip supply.

Following the earnings announcement on Wednesday, Micron's shares surged more than 15% in a single session.

The stock has gained approximately 863% over the past year.

Micron overtakes Meta briefly in market capitalisation

The rally briefly pushed Micron ahead of Meta Platforms and close to Tesla in terms of market capitalisation on Thursday.

Micron's market value had peaked at $1.398 trillion on Thursday's session compared with Meta Platforms at $1.392 trillion.

Tesla stood at around $1.4 trillion.

Micron currently has a market capitalisation of $1.37 trillion.

The company first crossed the $1 trillion market valuation mark on May 26, joining a group of semiconductor companies benefiting from investor enthusiasm surrounding artificial intelligence infrastructure.

Micron said second-quarter revenue quadrupled as demand for memory chips continued to outpace supply.

The company described the market as being supported by a demand-driven chip shortage that it expects to continue beyond 2027, marking a change from earlier expectations that supply constraints would ease sooner.

Micron now has 16 long-term chip supply agreements in place.

Growth was primarily driven by the company's two data-centre business segments, which together generated $25 billion in revenue, up 415% from a year earlier.