Micron Technology has had one of the more eye-catching runs in the chip sector over the past year. The stock has climbed nearly sixfold in 12 months, yet at least one analyst thinks there is still meaningful room to run.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
KeyBanc analyst John Vinh named Micron one of the chip stocks with the best risk/reward heading into earnings season. He carries an Overweight rating and a $600 price target. The stock was trading around $413.54 in premarket Monday, down 1.7% on the day — which still puts the $600 target roughly 40% above current levels.
Vinh’s case rests on a few pillars. First, he argues Micron is actually cheap. Despite the massive run-up, Micron trades at one of the lowest forward price-to-earnings multiples in the entire S&P 500. That kind of valuation gap doesn’t last forever, especially when earnings are heading higher.
Vinh is forecasting fiscal third-quarter revenue of $35.1 billion and earnings per share of $20.54. Both figures top the Wall Street consensus of $33.8 billion and $19.26, respectively. Micron is expected to report those results around late June.
Memory chips are a notoriously cyclical business. Boom periods get followed by busts, and investors have been burned before. But the current setup looks different to Vinh. He sees demand staying ahead of supply until at least mid-2027, when new manufacturing capacity is expected to come online in a meaningful way.
In the near term, he expects quarter-on-quarter pricing gains of 30–50% in Q2 2026. That kind of pricing power is rare in the chip industry and would flow straight through to margins.
The bullish case for Micron isn’t just a KeyBanc story. Aletheia Capital published its own take Monday, pointing to a wave of data center spending that benefits the broader memory and chip supply chain.
The firm projects the top four cloud providers will grow their general server capital expenditure 33% year-over-year in 2026, followed by 21% growth in 2027. That demand is being driven by agentic AI workloads, which require large volumes of memory.
Aletheia sees an inflection point for component suppliers starting in Q2 2026, with system vendors picking up speed in Q3 and Q4. Micron, alongside AMD and SK Hynix, is listed among the direct beneficiaries.
The firm also flags atypical seasonality this year — unit shipments are expected to grow sequentially each quarter, which is unusual by historical patterns.
Celestica, another name in the AI infrastructure supply chain, has already surged 344% over the past year and is trading near its 52-week high of $363.
Micron reports earnings around late June 2026. Analyst consensus sits at $33.8 billion in revenue and $19.26 EPS for the quarter.
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