Shares of Micron Technology (MU) tumbled 8% during Tuesday’s session as escalating tensions between the U.S. and Iran triggered widespread market volatility.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
This latest downturn compounds a challenging week for the memory chip manufacturer, which has surrendered approximately 11% of its value over five trading sessions.
Geopolitical factors weren’t the sole culprit behind the selloff. Market participants are increasingly anxious about intensifying rivalry in the high-bandwidth memory (HBM) space and potential cyclical oversupply conditions emerging across the memory semiconductor industry.
MU shares had been hovering near $412.88 before Tuesday’s retreat, positioned not far beneath the stock’s 52-week peak of $455.50. The recent decline has widened that gap considerably.
However, the price weakness hasn’t dampened Wall Street’s enthusiasm for the stock. Analyst sentiment remains firmly bullish, with a Strong Buy consensus supported by 26 Buy calls and two Hold recommendations issued during the past three months.
The average Street price objective registers at $417.81 — pointing to roughly 10% appreciation potential from pre-Tuesday trading levels.
Micron will unveil its Q2 FY26 financial performance on March 18. Analysts are projecting earnings per share of $8.52 alongside revenue of $18.85 billion.
Investors will scrutinize the report for insights into demand trajectories, pricing power, and supply-demand equilibrium across memory markets.
During the previous quarter, Micron significantly exceeded expectations — delivering $4.78 EPS compared to the $3.77 consensus estimate, while revenue reached $13.64 billion, representing 56.7% year-over-year expansion.
Management has provided Q2 EPS guidance spanning $8.22 to $8.62, which corresponds closely with current Wall Street projections.
UBS elevated its price target to $475 during the current week while reaffirming its Buy rating. This target suggests approximately 15% upside from recent closing prices.
Stifel Nicolaus holds the Street’s most aggressive target at $550. Analyst Brian Chin highlighted advancing memory pricing and emphasized server DDR5 as an undervalued growth driver complementing HBM opportunities.
Stifel contends that prevailing Wall Street estimates fail to capture the likelihood of positive earnings revisions in upcoming quarters.
Cantor Fitzgerald boosted its objective to $450 (overweight rating), Bank of America adjusted to $400 (buy rating), and Wells Fargo maintains a $410 target (overweight rating).
Regarding supply constraints, manufacturing facilities encounter genuine limitations — restricted floor space, extended equipment procurement timelines, and skilled labor shortages all constrain production expansion capacity.
The majority of new manufacturing capacity is being allocated toward HBM production, creating tightness in conventional DRAM and NAND markets. This dynamic could sustain elevated pricing in the immediate term.
Cyclical oversupply represents a longer-horizon risk for shareholders, alongside mounting HBM competition from industry rivals.
Institutional investors control approximately 80.8% of outstanding shares. Vanguard maintains a position exceeding 106 million MU shares, while Norges Bank established a fresh stake valued at roughly $6.4 billion during Q4.
On the insider transaction front, Director Teyin M. Liu acquired 11,600 shares at $337.07 per share in January — expanding their holdings by 428%.
Micron’s Q2 FY26 earnings announcement scheduled for March 18 represents the next critical inflection point for the stock.
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