Micron Technology shares climbed roughly 2.7% in premarket trading on Wednesday after Deutsche Bank and Citi raised their price targets on the memory chipmaker, citing a DRAM supply-demand dynamic that both banks believe will remain tight well past 2026.
Analyst revisions and the case for extended tightness
Deutsche Bank's Melissa Weathers increased her price target on Micron to $1,500 from $1,000. She argued that DRAM supply tightness "could persist well into 2028 and potentially beyond" as bit supply growth lags demand. Weathers said the outlook has become more constrained since her previous update, which had anticipated a shortage continuing through at least 2027. She also flagged the next phase of tightness as being driven by rising demand for both traditional and low-power DRAM as agentic AI makes workloads more memory intensive.
Weathers further emphasized that these conditions are expected to remain in place "even despite new and accelerated capacity additions announced in the last 180 days."
Citi raises targets, lifts earnings estimates
Citi analyst Atif Malik moved his Micron price target to $1,200 and raised his fiscal 2026 and 2027 earnings estimates after memory pricing through the year to date came in stronger than expected. Malik projects DRAM average selling prices to increase 200% in 2026, underpinned by robust data center demand and constrained supply. He noted that spot prices are already up 52% since the start of January and sit 21% above current contract pricing - a divergence Citi said indicates the likelihood of further contract price increases ahead.
Corporate calendar and consensus context
Micron is scheduled to report fiscal third-quarter results on June 24. Citi's fiscal 2027 earnings-per-share estimate of $114.73 is 4% higher than the Street consensus, reflecting the bank's more bullish view on memory pricing and the company�s prospective margins.
Market implications
The analyst upgrades and the price-action in Micron reflect a broader recalibration around DRAM supply elasticity and end-market demand, particularly from hyperscale data centers. The interplay between spot and contract pricing will be a key metric for market participants watching for signs that short-term price strength translates into sustained contract-level improvements.
Investors and industry watchers will also be monitoring announced capacity additions over the past 180 days to see whether accelerated builds materially relieve the supply tightness that analysts now expect to extend into the latter half of the decade.