Micron (MU) Stock Skyrockets 38% in Historic Weekly Rally Fueled by Memory Chip Shortage

Table of Contents Micron Technology (MU) delivered a performance this week that market observers won’t soon forget. Shares concluded Friday’s trading at $746.81, posting gains exceeding 15% for the session. Across the entire week, MU climbed nearly 38% — representing its strongest weekly showing since December 2008, when shares were changing hands below $5 during the depths of the Great Recession. Micron Technology, Inc., MU Yes, you read that correctly. Year-to-date gains now stand at approximately 147%, while the past 30 days alone have delivered returns exceeding 84%. The company’s market capitalization has climbed above $840 billion, positioning it ahead of JPMorgan Chase. While Micron required more than four decades to accumulate its initial $200 billion in market value, it matched that achievement within just seven days. Friday saw the stock reach an all-time intraday peak of $712.82, according to historical data extending back to 1984. The straightforward explanation: a worldwide scarcity of memory semiconductors. Appetite for DRAM and NAND — the primary memory chip categories — has intensified dramatically as hyperscale cloud providers invest heavily in artificial intelligence infrastructure. Combined capital expenditures from major cloud companies could eclipse $1 trillion before the close of next year, based on projections from Bank of America and Evercore. Micron, Samsung, and SK Hynix collectively manufacture over 90% of global DRAM production. This concentrated supply base, paired with accelerating demand, has granted memory producers significant control over pricing. Every bit of Micron’s production capacity through 2026 has been contracted. Mizuho analyst Vijay Rakesh observed that Micron “remains well positioned across the memory landscape with leading edge DRAM nodes helping drive cost-downs year-over-year.” The rally extends beyond Micron alone. AMD climbed 26% during the week, reaching a fresh 52-week high. Intel surged 25% and has more than doubled in value over the past month. Sandisk advanced over 16% on Friday. Retail trading activity in Micron has intensified notably. Net purchasing reached its highest point in two years during mid-April, based on data from Vanda Research. “Micron is commanding a much bigger share of retail flow and attention,” said Viraj Patel, strategist at Vanda. Samsung achieved trillion-dollar valuation status this week. SK Hynix is reportedly receiving investment proposals from international technology companies seeking to finance additional memory production facilities. During recent quarterly earnings presentations, corporations ranging from Meta Platforms to CoreWeave have cited escalating component expenses as a factor behind elevated spending levels — a direct result of the supply constraints. Not all observers believe the upward trajectory will persist indefinitely. Carolyn Bell, lead portfolio manager at Stonehage Fleming, characterized it as a cyclical pattern connected to the present stage of data center expansion. Other Wall Street analysts contend that Micron is being reframed as a high-growth AI infrastructure investment rather than a conventional cyclical semiconductor manufacturer. Micron currently holds the position of 12th largest U.S. company by market capitalization, trailing only Eli Lilly at $900 billion.