Outrageous Predictions
Die Grüne Revolution der Schweiz: 30 Milliarden Franken-Initiative bis 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Investment Strategist
Micron’s results are excellent, but investors flinched at the size of the coming factory bill.
The memory boom looks durable, especially in AI, where supply stays tight and pricing stays strong.
Helium is a real supply-chain risk, but for now it looks more like a margin nuisance than a production breaker.
Micron’s latest report is a neat reminder that markets are not paid to clap, only to discount the next problem. On 18 March 2026, the company delivered results and guidance that looked almost absurdly strong, yet the shares still fell almost 5% in after-hours trading as investors focused on the sharp rise in factory spending. That matters because Micron is not just another chipmaker. It sits right in the middle of the artificial intelligence build-out, where memory has gone from useful helper to essential infrastructure.
The contrast is what makes the quarter so useful for long-term investors. Ahead of earnings, Micron was already in full flight. On 17 March 2026, the stock closed at 461.69 USD, up 4.5%, for the session, after the company said it had begun volume shipments of its HBM4 product for Nvidia’s Vera Rubin platform. That recent strength sits on top of an even bigger run, with the shares up 184% over the past six months. Then came the report, and the market suddenly remembered that AI demand may be glorious, but cleanrooms, packaging capacity and fabs still come with a very real price tag.
The quarter itself leaves very little room for complaint, with all the key headline metrics landing above Bloomberg consensus. Micron reported fiscal second-quarter revenue of 23.9 billion USD, up 196% year on year, with adjusted earnings per share of 12.20 USD and gross margin of about 75%. For the fiscal third quarter, it guides to roughly 33.5 billion USD in revenue, 19.15 USD in adjusted earnings per share and gross margin around 81%. In short, that is not just a beat. That is the sort of number set that makes spreadsheets look overly cheerful.
So why did the stock wobble? Because Micron also said fiscal 2026 capital spending should be above 25 billion USD, and that construction-related spending in fiscal 2027 should rise by more than 10 billion USD year on year as it expands its manufacturing footprint. Investors do not dislike growth spending in itself. They dislike the possibility that today’s shortage story becomes tomorrow’s overbuilding story.
That reaction says less about weak demand than about timing and discipline. Memory has always been one of the market’s more dramatic industries. When supply is tight, prices rise fast and margins look heroic. When too much capacity arrives, the mood can change with surprising speed. Micron is trying to convince investors that this cycle is different because artificial intelligence demand is deeper, broader and more durable than a normal handset or personal computer upswing. The market seems willing to believe that. It just wants proof that the expansion bill will earn its keep.
Memory moves from background actor to co-starThe broader industry point is important. Memory used to be treated as the more cyclical cousin in semiconductors, turning hot and cold with depressing regularity. Artificial intelligence changes that equation. Training and running large models requires huge volumes of high-bandwidth memory, or HBM, which is the ultra-fast memory placed close to the processor so data can move quickly without turning the system into a traffic jam. Micron, Samsung and SK Hynix dominate that market, which means the number of serious suppliers is small just as demand is exploding.
Micron’s own numbers show how much pricing power has returned. In the fiscal second quarter, dynamic random-access memory, or DRAM, revenue rose 207% year on year, while NAND flash memory revenue rose 169%. Management said DRAM prices increased in the mid-60% range quarter on quarter and NAND prices in the high-70% range. That is the kind of pricing environment that turns a “component supplier” into something closer to a toll collector on the busiest road in artificial intelligence.
This also helps explain why Micron matters beyond Micron. Strong memory pricing is good news for the companies supplying the AI hardware stack, from packaging to manufacturing equipment. It is less cheerful for downstream device makers that still need memory but do not get to charge AI-style margins for it. In other words, the memory boom is not just a company story. It is a pressure point that redistributes profits across the technology chain.
The clearest message from this quarter is that the AI build-out is entering a more industrial phase. The glamorous part was talking about the smartest model and the fastest accelerator. The current phase is about who can actually build enough physical capacity to keep the whole machine running. Micron’s spending plans in Idaho, New York, Taiwan, Singapore, Japan and India tell you that the constraint is no longer imagination. It is concrete, cleanroom space, equipment lead times and execution.
That is why the after-hours sell-off is more nuanced than it first looks. Investors were not rejecting the demand story. They were putting a price on the fact that strong demand now requires very heavy investment, and that heavy investment always carries execution risk. The memory boom is real. The question is whether Micron can scale into it without letting tomorrow’s supply flood today’s margin pool. That is a much less glamorous question, but markets often prefer plumbing to poetry.
The first risk is simple: if memory supply ramps faster than demand, pricing power cools and margins come back to earth. The early warning signs are easier to spot than many investors think. Watch for weaker commentary on DRAM and HBM pricing, looser inventory conditions and any hint that customers are delaying orders or double-ordering less aggressively.
The second risk is customer concentration at the top end of AI. Micron’s HBM4 progress matters partly because it is tied to Nvidia’s Vera Rubin platform. If customer allocations shift, or if a rival secures a better position in the next wave of systems, the market will notice quickly. In a concentrated market, design wins matter almost as much as wafer output.
The third risk is the quiet one: helium. Bloomberg Intelligence reported that disruptions in Qatar, which accounts for nearly one-third of global helium output, have already doubled spot prices. That makes helium a sensible item to monitor. But for now it still looks more like a pricing headache than a production killer, since the immediate impact on advanced fabs is more about volatility and logistics than outright wafer cuts.
Watch free cash flow against factory spending, not revenue alone. In this phase, cash discipline matters more than applause.
Follow HBM design wins and customer mix. In AI memory, who buys matters almost as much as how much.
Treat helium as a dashboard light, not a crash alarm. A lasting disruption would show up in price stress first.
Micron’s quarter does not say the AI memory trade is overcooked. It says it is growing up. The easy phase was cheering every headline about demand. The harder phase is judging who can turn that demand into durable capacity, disciplined spending and returns that survive the next turn of the cycle.
Micron just showed that memory is no longer the quiet chip in the background. It is one of the core pieces of the AI machine. But the market also reminded us of an old truth: even in a gold rush, investors still worry about the cost of buying more shovels. That may sound dull, but it is also where a lot of future winners will be decided.