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Micron shares slip as hefty spending plans eclipse strong AI-fueled earnings

By Thomson Reuters Mar 19, 2026 | 4:03 AM

By Joel Jose

March 19 (Reuters) – Micron’s shares dropped more than 4% before the bell on Thursday, as the chipmaker’s plans for heftier capex spending unnerved investors, taking the shine off ​another round of AI-fueled blockbuster quarterly earnings.

Micron, whose shares ‌have climbed more than 61% this year after surging over 240% in 2025, said it is boosting its 2026 capital spending plan by $5 billion to meet growing demand, bringing its total investment for the current fiscal year to more ‌than $25 ​billion.

It added spending will rise again in ⁠2027, with manufacturing expansion ⁠expected to drive construction-related costs more than $10 billion higher compared with 2026.

The chipmaker topped Wall Street expectations for the second quarter and forecast third-quarter revenue of $33.5 billion, plus or minus $750 million, ​compared with analysts’ average estimate of $24.29 billion according to data compiled by LSEG.

“Investors wager that these are peak earnings and will ⁠be unsustainable,” said Mike O’Rourke, chief market ⁠strategist at JonesTrading.

“Micron also increased its capex forecast ​to continue to add production capacity. That reinforces the belief that the ​memory shortage is a temporary phenomenon and business will ‌return to its commodity nature in coming years as capacity comes online.”

The chipmaker is one of only three global suppliers of high-bandwidth memory used in AI systems, along with South Korea’s Samsung and SK ⁠Hynix.

Shares of Samsung and SK Hynix closed down 3.84% and 4.07%, respectively, on Thursday.

Shares of other U.S. memory makers such as Western Digital, ⁠Seagate Technology and Sandisk ‌fell between 2% and 4% premarket.

As U.S. tech ⁠giants pour billions into long-term AI data-center buildouts, ​the ‌resulting surge in computing capacity is driving a ​steep jump ⁠in demand for high-end memory chips.

That scramble for supply has created a crunch and driven prices higher, a backdrop that has helped Micron book record profit margins in the quarter ended February.

(Reporting by Joel Jose in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Shashwat Chauhan in Bengaluru; Editing by ​Krishna Chandra Eluri)