Overview
Micron Technology delivered fiscal third-quarter results that materially surpassed Wall Street estimates, a report that underscored how demand for artificial-intelligence hardware is reshaping the memory-chip market. The company said revenue jumped to $41.46 billion, up from $9.3 billion a year earlier, and topping the $35.84 billion consensus. Adjusted earnings per share reached $25.11, above the $20.78 analysts had forecast.
Shares reacted strongly to the numbers, rising more than 17% in premarket trading the following day and briefly pushing Micron’s market capitalization above $1 trillion. That milestone capped a more than 700% share-price increase over the past year.
Guidance and sales mix
Management provided a near-term outlook that also exceeded expectations, guiding to roughly $50 billion in revenue for the current quarter. That compares with $11.3 billion a year earlier and stands well above the $43.58 billion consensus for the period.
The company reiterated its unique position as the only U.S. producer of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chips, the specialized modules that sit alongside AI accelerators such as those from Nvidia. Micron said that persistent demand for HBM has outpaced supply, enabling itself and its primary competitors to command premium pricing across the memory segment. That pricing dynamic has contributed to broader gains across memory types used in smartphones, laptops and other consumer devices.
Strategic Customer Agreements and contractual visibility
One of the most consequential developments announced by Micron was the signing of 16 Strategic Customer Agreements (SCAs). These are multi-year supply contracts with data-center operators, automakers and other customers, generally spanning three to five years. CEO Sanjay Mehrotra said that once these agreements are completed, the company expects approximately half or more of its revenue to be covered by SCAs. Micron described the agreements as binding contracts that include firm purchase volumes and noted $22 billion of financial commitments associated with the deals.
Management presented these contracts as a means to increase revenue visibility and reduce short-term volatility in pricing and volumes, with the agreements containing contractual price floors and purchase commitments that anchor gross margins above prior-cycle levels.
Profitability and segment performance
Micron reported a substantial expansion in gross margin, which rose to 84.9% for the quarter, up from 74.9% in the prior period and 39% a year ago. This expansion outpaced analyst projections and reflected both strong pricing and a favorable product mix.
Performance across Micron’s businesses was broad-based, but the data-center unit led growth. Data-center revenue surged to $11.5 billion from $1.53 billion a year earlier. Within that segment, Micron recorded more than $5 billion in revenue from data-center solid-state drives. Cloud memory sales increased by more than 300%, reaching $13.77 billion for the quarter.
Analysts’ perspectives
Across major firms, analysts interpreted the results and the SCA announcements as materially reducing uncertainty around revenue and margins, while also highlighting questions about how the company and the industry will balance near-term price upside with longer-term durability.
Bank of America characterized the quarter as reinforcing a constructive view on memory’s role in AI and on improved supply-side discipline that supports a more durable cycle. The firm noted that although the SCAs - now 16 in total - might modestly limit near-term pricing upside, they materially enhance visibility and lower volatility by aligning Micron with customers facing an increased "memory tax" that the analyst framed at around 35% of AI capital expenditure. Bank of America also highlighted a valuation argument, referencing an implied free-cash-flow yield near 10% and signaling expectations for a step-up in capital returns after the CHIPS Act anniversary in December 2026.
Susquehanna focused on the margin floor the SCAs create, stating that even at the lowest point under current contracts, gross margins would remain above the company’s prior peak quarterly margin of roughly 60%. The firm projected that the 16 SCAs position Micron to generate meaningful free cash flow - the analyst cited an estimate in excess of $110 billion in FY27 - with most of that cash available for shareholder returns consistent with management’s pledge to return 100% of excess cash over time. Susquehanna emphasized contractual price floors for existing products and a negotiated-quarterly pricing mechanism that cannot drop below those floors, thereby locking in margins above prior-cycle peaks.
Morgan Stanley described the quarter and outlook as positive, while flagging that the central discussion for investors remains the durability of current conditions. The bank noted modest capital-expenditure increases, improved long-term agreement disclosures and positive execution across eSSD, HBM and LPDDR5 SOCAMM initiatives. It also observed a notable shift in investor sentiment, with more buyers following the results compared with the previous two quarters.
Raymond James said it views Micron as a leading beneficiary of the current memory cycle, which that firm sees increasingly shaped by structural factors - AI-driven demand and ongoing supply tightness - that support pricing and margins. Raymond James pointed to the company’s execution on HBM4, building on the prior success with HBM3E, and noted that the AI-related opportunity extends beyond HBM into conventional DRAM and enterprise SSDs.
Goldman Sachs labeled the SCAs a significant positive for the stock, suggesting they could increase the multiple investors are willing to pay on peak earnings. The bank also noted that industry supply additions remain underway but judged that meaningful slack in the market is unlikely until 2028 at the earliest. Given a view of roughly balanced risk and reward at current levels, Goldman retained a Neutral rating, while saying it would become more constructive if the industry maintains supply discipline through 2028 and beyond.
Baird echoed expectations for DRAM undersupply in 2027 and 2028, projecting bit-growth supply in the low 20s percent for each year. Combined with Micron’s SCAs - which Baird said include floors well above prior gross-margin peaks and pricing set at or near C2Q levels - the firm saw enhanced gross-margin and earnings visibility that could support multiple expansion.
Implications
Micron’s results and its disclosed SCAs provide a clearer picture of revenue and margin durability in the near term, according to both company commentary and analysts quoted above. The high level of contractual commitments - $22 billion explicitly tied to the SCAs and the expectation that roughly half or more of company revenue will fall under these agreements when finalized - represents a notable shift in Micron’s commercial structure and the predictability of cash flows.
How the rest of the industry manages supply additions and pricing across 2027 and 2028 will be an important factor for investors assessing whether current margins and pricing power are sustained or eventually moderated as capacity comes online.
Bottom line
Micron’s quarter combined blockbuster top- and bottom-line results with expanded gross margins and multi-year customer contracts that materially increase revenue visibility. The market rewarded that combination with a large intraday gain and a temporary move above the $1 trillion market-cap milestone. Analysts generally acknowledged the positive step for earnings visibility and potential balance-sheet strength, while noting the critical role of industry-wide supply discipline in determining how durable these conditions prove to be in the years ahead.