Micron stock (NASDAQ: MU) surged nearly 5% on Wednesday as investors digested a fresh round of analyst upgrades.
The fresh rally came in the backdrop of the artificial intelligence sector pulling demand in one direction, and the evidence shows that it is not slowing down.
Micron’s rally on Wednesday was driven by multiple catalysts, including some strong structural ones, which strengthen the long-term vision for investors.
Micron stock: Fresh round of analyst upgrades
Wednesday’s rally came after a fresh wave of analyst commentary, led by upgrades from Citigroup and Susquehanna.
The analysts cited stronger-than-expected memory pricing forecasts and projected DRAM price increases of as much as 171% year over year.
Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM) is the short-term memory that computers and servers use to run active tasks.
The price of DRAM fluctuates as supply and demand cycles change. When supply exceeds demand, prices collapse, and chipmakers lose money. Conversely, when demand outpaces supply, prices climb sharply, and margins recover quickly.
Analysts are betting on a new upcycle, driven by artificial intelligence infrastructure rather than a typical consumer electronics recovery.
Micron’s most recent quarterly results underline why analysts are growing more confident. Adjusted gross margins expanded to 56.8% in Q1 FY2026, up from 39.5% a year earlier.
Adjusted EPS surged 167% year over year to $4.78.
AI has changed what memory is worth
Beyond analyst upgrades and other sentiment related factors, Micron’s stock rally is built on some major structural foundations.
Micron’s entire 2026 output of High Bandwidth Memory, its most advanced AI-focused product, is already sold out under long-term contracts.
High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) is a specialised type of chip that sits directly alongside AI processors, like Nvidia’s GPUs, and feeds them data at extraordinary speeds.
As AI models grow larger and more complex, their need for high-bandwidth memory increases, placing Micron in a strategically powerful position in the AI infrastructure supply chain.
Demand for HBM is expected to rise 70% year over year in 2026 alone, according to TrendForce.
HBM now accounts for 23% of total DRAM wafer output globally, up from 19% last year.
Micron is not just meeting this demand; they understand its potential and are already working on expansion.
The company has announced approximately $200 billion in planned capacity expansion to address what it describes as a historic memory supply crunch.
That is a significant long-term bet, and it signals management’s conviction that AI-driven memory demand is not a one-year story.
Wednesday’s rally is grounded in real data. But memory markets have broken optimists before.
Again, as the industry remains cyclical, a slight increase in supply from Samsung or SK Hynix (Micron’s biggest competitors) could pressure pricing faster than current forecasts suggest.
The consensus among 41 Wall Street analysts covering Micron is a Strong Buy, with price targets ranging up to $550.
The post Why Micron stock is soaring nearly 5% today? appeared first on Invezz
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