April Arnzen, who serves as Executive Vice President and Chief People Officer at Micron Technology INC (NASDAQ: MU), reported the sale of 40,000 shares of the company's common stock on April 1, 2026, according to a Form 4 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The total proceeds from the transactions were $13,895,761.
The sale took place against the backdrop of a sharp run-up in Micron shares, which have risen nearly 394% over the prior 12 months and were trading at $366.24 per share at the time of reporting. The company carries a market capitalization of $413 billion. An InvestingPro analysis cited in the filing indicates that the stock remains undervalued relative to its Fair Value.
The reported trades were executed in multiple tranches at different price points. The filing breaks the transactions down as follows:
- 8,630 shares were sold at prices ranging from $344.722 to $345.7108, generating $2,988,423 in proceeds.
- 5,766 shares were sold at prices between $345.7221 and $346.71, totaling $1,996,393.
- 604 shares were sold at prices from $346.72 to $346.90, for $209,495.
- The largest block, 25,000 shares, was sold at $348.46 per share, producing $8,711,500.
Following these sales, Arnzen is reported to directly own 125,737 shares of Micron common stock.
The transactions were carried out pursuant to a previously established Rule 10b5-1 trading plan, which Arnzen adopted on December 19, 2025. The filing indicates the sales were conducted under that pre-arranged plan rather than as ad hoc trades.
Separately, Micron disclosed pricing for a $5.4 billion debt tender offer that covers six series of its outstanding senior notes. The consideration for those notes will be determined using reference U.S. Treasury securities with fixed spreads set between 20 and 65 basis points.
Analyst coverage of Micron around the same timeframe showed a range of views. Erste Group downgraded Micron's rating to Hold from Buy, pointing to concerns that elevated capital expenditures could reduce free cash flow. By contrast, Cantor Fitzgerald maintained an Overweight rating, citing sustainable AI-led demand for memory products as a supportive factor. Cantor Fitzgerald analyst C.J. Muse highlighted the importance of AI-driven memory demand and noted structural changes in Micron's customer supply relationships.
Morgan Stanley also kept an overweight rating, characterizing recent market selloffs as a healthy correction rather than an indication of a fundamental change. The bank added that persistent supply constraints are likely to continue supporting the memory sector.
These developments - insider sales under a scheduled plan, a sizable debt tender offer, and mixed analyst commentary on capital intensity versus AI-driven demand - come amid broader market conversations about the outlook for memory stocks and the dynamics shaping that market segment.