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Micron joins $1 trillion club as AI race powers memory chip boom

By Thomson Reuters May 26, 2026 | 9:46 AM

May 26 (Reuters) – Micron Technology topped $1 trillion in market value for the first time on Tuesday, crowning a dizzying rally that has cemented the largest U.S. memory chipmaker as one of the standout winners of the ​AI boom.

Micron’s shares were last up 18% at $886.6 – a record high – with ‌Tuesday’s boost coming after brokerage UBS increased its price target on the stock to $1,625 from $535, which is the highest among the 46 brokerages covering the company, according to LSEG data.

The milestone, which underscores memory chips’ central role in AI infrastructure, also reflects a broader shift in the AI ‌trade ​as investors seek out companies that can benefit from ⁠Big Tech’s massive spending plans ⁠after initially crowding into makers of graphics processors.

South Korea’s Samsung Electronics, the world’s top memory chipmaker, has already hit the $1 trillion milestone, while SK Hynix is also closing in.

While Nvidia makes the powerful processors used to train and run AI ​models, Micron mainly produces memory chips used to store and move data.

The company’s ascent gives the U.S. a strong contender in a memory-chip race that has ⁠largely been led by Asia so far.

Shares of ⁠Micron, long viewed as one of the semiconductor industry’s most cyclical ​names, have jumped more than eightfold in the last 12 months, thanks to strong ​earnings and supply chain constraints that have given it pricing power.

With technology ‌companies racing toward artificial general intelligence, customers are committing to longer-term data center investments that have fueled a sharp rise in demand for advanced memory and storage, creating a supply crunch and driving price increases.

Micron has said its entire 2026 high-bandwidth memory (HBM) ⁠chip supply is already sold out, a sign of how far demand is outstripping capacity. Its next-generation HBM4 products are now in production.

The company emerged as one of the ⁠biggest institutional favorites in the ‌first quarter of the year, according to regulatory filings. About ⁠2,440 institutions disclosed new positions in the company, including Rockefeller ​Capital ‌Management and Schroders.

The entry into the exclusive club signals a ​sharp rebound ⁠from the post-pandemic period when memory chipmakers grappled with a supply glut as demand for personal computers and smartphones weakened due to decades-high inflation.

Micron trades at 8.42 times expected earnings over the next 12 months, compared with 22.15 for the benchmark S&P 500 index and 26.23 for the Nasdaq 100.

(Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj ​Kalluvila and Jonathan Ananda)