Memory chips are boring until they aren’t, and Wednesday afternoon they stopped being boring. Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU | MU Price Prediction) guided fiscal fourth-quarter revenue to $50 billion, plus or minus $1 billion, against a Wall Street consensus parked around $43 billion.
Bloomberg Tech host Ed Ludlow, on Bloomberg Businessweek Daily, summed up the move with a line that did the rounds on every trading desk by Thursday morning. “It’s not about beating the expectations of the street. Micron reset the expectations of the entire industry.” The stock responded accordingly, closing at $1,213.56 on June 25, an all-time high and a 15.74% single-session move. Year to date, Micron is up 275%.
Why Ludlow called it a reset, not a beat
Ludlow’s point was about the source of the dollars. The Q4 guide is being driven by tight supply conditions and pricing power, particularly in data center and high-bandwidth memory, with higher prices, not higher unit volumes, driving the gain. Supply is tight “and it’s going to be tight for a long time,” Ludlow noted, which hands Micron something memory companies almost never get to keep for long. Pricing power.
That framing matters because memory is a cyclical commodity business that periodically buries its participants. Ludlow flagged the flip side too. “Everyone wants the thing you’re selling,” but the same dynamic is “not good for the companies who are in the market trying to get hold of those chips.” Translation. Every hyperscaler building out AI infrastructure is paying up, and Micron’s revenue line is their margin compression.
The Q3 results under the hood
The numbers Micron reported before the guide stole the show already stood out. Revenue of $41.46 billion against a consensus of $35.25 billion, growing 345.72% year over year. Non-GAAP EPS landed at $25.11, the seventh consecutive EPS beat. GAAP gross margin expanded to 84.6% from 37.7% a year ago, a margin profile software companies would envy. Operating cash flow hit $25.39 billion, free cash flow $18.30 billion, against capex of $7.83 billion.
Segment-wise, Cloud Memory at $13.77 billion overtook Core Data Center at $11.52 billion and Mobile and Client at $11.52 billion. AI accelerators eat HBM, and Micron’s HBM4 is already shipping in volume to its lead customer platform, with HBM4E targeted for calendar 2027 production.
What durability actually looks like
CEO Sanjay Mehrotra spent his prepared remarks pushing one phrase, multi-year Strategic Customer Agreements. “We believe our multi-year Strategic Customer Agreements will significantly enhance the durability and predictability of Micron’s strong financial performance,” he said. The unsubtle message to investors who still mark memory stocks as cyclicals. This cycle has contracts attached.
The risks haven’t vanished. Q3 included a $325 million loss on debt prepayments, capex is running at record levels, and the lead HBM customer concentration is real. Reddit’s r/stocks crowd, which lit up at a peak sentiment score of 66 on Wednesday evening, had already cooled to neutral by Friday morning, with the most debated thread asking whether “Micron’s guidance is truly bullish for the overall market.”
Polymarket bettors, for what it’s worth, had already priced this in. The most recent MU earnings prediction market resolved decisively to “Up”. The harder question now is whether $50 billion quarters become the new baseline or the new high-water mark, and Mehrotra is betting his capex budget on the former.