Micron shares surge after the chipmaker reported record fiscal Q1 2026 results, forecast another record quarter, and warned that tight memory-market conditions could persist beyond 2026 as AI data centers soak up high-bandwidth memory (HBM) supply.
What happened and why the market reacted
Micron Technology said its fiscal first quarter of 2026 (ended Nov. 27, 2025) delivered the highest quarterly revenue in company history, fueled by accelerating AI-driven demand and higher memory pricing in a supply-constrained market.
The company also issued an unusually strong outlook for fiscal Q2 2026, signaling that momentum is not limited to one quarter.
For investors, the key drivers were:
- AI data centers pulling forward demand for premium memory products, especially HBM used alongside AI GPUs.
- Rising profitability as higher-value products and pricing lifted margins.
- A longer-than-expected supply squeeze, with Micron stating it expects tight market conditions to continue beyond calendar 2026.
The numbers: record revenue, margin expansion, and cash generation
Micron reported:
- Revenue: $13.64 billion (up from $11.32 billion in the prior quarter and $8.71 billion a year earlier)
- GAAP net income: $5.24 billion (or $4.60 diluted EPS)
- Non-GAAP net income: $5.48 billion (or $4.78 diluted EPS)
- Operating cash flow: $8.41 billion
- Adjusted free cash flow: $3.9 billion (with $4.5 billion in net capex investments)
Micron also declared a quarterly dividend of $0.115 per share, payable Jan. 14, 2026 (record date Dec. 29, 2025).
Table: Micron key results vs. prior periods (Fiscal Q1)
| Metric | FQ1 2026 | FQ4 2025 | FQ1 2025 |
| Revenue | $13.643B | $11.315B | $8.709B |
| GAAP gross margin (% of revenue) | 56.0% | 44.7% | 38.4% |
| GAAP net income | $5.240B | $3.201B | $1.870B |
| GAAP diluted EPS | $4.60 | $2.83 | $1.67 |
| Operating cash flow | $8.411B | $5.730B | $3.244B |
| Adjusted free cash flow | $3.906B | $0.803B | $0.112B |
Guidance: Micron projects another record quarter
For fiscal Q2 2026, Micron guided to:
- Revenue: $18.7 billion ± $400 million
- Non-GAAP gross margin: 68% ± 1%
- Non-GAAP EPS: $8.42 ± $0.20
If achieved, the revenue outlook implies a sharp sequential jump and reinforces Micron’s message that AI-driven demand is expanding faster than new supply can come online.
Table: Micron outlook (Fiscal Q2 2026)
| Guidance item | GAAP outlook | Non-GAAP outlook |
| Revenue | $18.7B ± $0.4B | $18.7B ± $0.4B |
| Gross margin | 67% ± 1% | 68% ± 1% |
| Operating expenses | $1.56B ± $0.02B | $1.38B ± $0.02B |
| Diluted EPS | $8.19 ± $0.20 | $8.42 ± $0.20 |
Where the growth is coming from: data center memory and storage
Micron’s results show strength across business units, with notable growth tied to cloud and data center demand.
Table: Business unit revenue (Micron fiscal Q1 2026)
| Business unit | Revenue (FQ1 2026) | Revenue (FQ4 2025) | Revenue (FQ1 2025) |
| Cloud Memory Business Unit | $5.284B | $4.543B | $2.648B |
| Core Data Center Business Unit | $2.379B | $1.577B | $2.292B |
| Mobile and Client Business Unit | $4.255B | $3.760B | $2.608B |
| Automotive and Embedded Business Unit | $1.720B | $1.434B | $1.158B |
The bigger story: HBM is reshaping the memory market
Micron’s earnings materials emphasize that memory is becoming a strategic constraint for AI performance, not just a commodity component.
A key signal from management: Micron said it has completed price-and-volume agreements for its entire calendar 2026 HBM supply, and highlighted a roadmap that includes HBM4. It also projected the HBM total addressable market rising from about $35 billion in 2025 to about $100 billion in 2028—implying roughly 40% CAGR over that period.
That matters because HBM is central to AI server builds, and HBM supply is limited industry-wide. When HBM demand outpaces supply, manufacturers often prioritize high-margin data-center products—tightening availability and raising prices elsewhere.
Supply tightness beyond 2026: what it could mean for PCs, phones, and prices
Micron said sustained demand plus supply constraints are contributing to tight market conditions and that it expects those conditions to persist beyond calendar 2026.
In practical terms, prolonged tightness can lead to:
- Higher average selling prices for DRAM and NAND across cycles.
- More allocation to hyperscalers, since AI infrastructure budgets are large and contracts are longer.
- Greater volatility for consumer markets (PCs, smartphones, gaming), where buyers are more price-sensitive.
Micron also framed its operational response as maximizing output from its current manufacturing footprint while investing in additional capability (including cleanroom expansion).
Strategic move: Micron exits the Crucial consumer business
Earlier in December, Micron announced it would exit the Crucial consumer business, including selling Crucial-branded consumer products through major retailers and e-commerce channels. The company said it would continue shipping Crucial consumer products until the end of fiscal Q2 (February 2026) and continue warranty support.
Micron linked the decision to AI-driven data-center growth, saying it is prioritizing supply and support for larger strategic customers in faster-growing segments. The move underscores how strongly the company is reallocating capacity toward higher-value enterprise and AI demand.
Competition and industry context: why Micron’s update matters
HBM supply is concentrated among a small group of companies, and demand is being driven by AI GPU platforms used in large-scale training and inference clusters. Micron’s results and guidance are being watched as a barometer for:
- AI infrastructure spending durability (whether hyperscalers keep building aggressively).
- Memory pricing trajectory (whether the upcycle is sustained).
- How much supply the industry can add without undermining profitability.
Micron’s message—record results now, record guidance next, and tightness beyond 2026—suggests the company believes this cycle is being supported by longer-term structural demand rather than a short inventory swing.
Final thoughts: what to watch next
Micron’s record quarter and bullish outlook point to a market where AI is pulling memory demand forward faster than supply can scale. The next key checkpoints for readers and investors include:
- Whether Micron maintains guidance execution as it ramps AI-focused production.
- Signals on HBM allocations and multi-year contracts with major customers.
- Updates on capital spending, capacity expansion, and how quickly new supply can reach high yields.
- The knock-on impact on consumer device pricing if DRAM and NAND remain tight into 2027.






