Shares of Micron Technology jumped sharply in premarket trading on Thursday after the memory-chip maker delivered blockbuster third-quarter results, boosting investor conviction that artificial intelligence infrastructure spending remains one of the most powerful forces driving the global technology sector.
The company reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of $41.46 billion, more than quadrupling the $9.3 billion recorded a year earlier and comfortably surpassing Wall Street expectations of roughly $36 billion, according to LSEG data.
The results underscore how the AI boom has transformed the economics of the memory industry. Once viewed as one of the most cyclical segments of the semiconductor market, memory has emerged as a critical bottleneck in the race to build powerful AI systems.
Micron also issued a remarkably strong outlook, forecasting approximately $50 billion in revenue for the current quarter, compared with $11.3 billion in the corresponding period a year ago. Investors responded enthusiastically, sending the stock up more than 16% in premarket trading. The rally caps an extraordinary run for the company. Micron shares have surged roughly 723% over the past year, lifting its market capitalization to approximately $1.2 trillion and placing it among the biggest beneficiaries of the global AI investment cycle.
The latest results offer further evidence that demand from hyperscale cloud providers remains exceptionally strong. Technology giants are pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into AI infrastructure, building massive data centers equipped with advanced graphics processors and memory systems capable of training and running sophisticated AI models.
While attention often focuses on AI chipmakers, memory has become just as important. Modern AI systems require enormous quantities of high-bandwidth memory and DRAM to process and move data efficiently. Every new generation of AI hardware demands significantly more memory than previous systems, creating an unprecedented surge in demand.
As a result, a growing share of global memory production is being directed toward AI servers and data-center deployments. That shift has tightened supply across the broader memory market, leaving less capacity available for smartphones, personal computers, and consumer electronics. The resulting supply-demand imbalance has driven memory prices sharply higher and dramatically boosted profitability across the sector.
Long-Term Contracts Signal Confidence in Sustained Demand
Perhaps the most significant takeaway from Micron’s earnings report was management’s disclosure that the company has secured a series of long-term customer commitments designed to provide greater revenue visibility.
Micron said it has signed 16 long-term agreements with customers spanning industries including cloud computing, data centers, and automotive manufacturing. The agreements lock in sales commitments for periods ranging from three to five years and are expected to generate approximately $22 billion in financial commitments.
The deals represent an important shift for an industry historically characterized by volatile pricing and abrupt demand swings. Analysts at RBC Capital Markets noted that approximately 40% of Micron’s future revenue is expected to come from long-term supply agreements containing minimum pricing provisions. Such arrangements provide a degree of insulation against future downturns by reducing exposure to sudden price collapses that have traditionally plagued memory manufacturers.
The structure effectively gives Micron a more predictable revenue base while helping customers secure access to critical memory supplies in an increasingly competitive market.
Why Investors Are Paying Attention to the Contracts
For investors, the long-term agreements may be nearly as important as the earnings beat itself. A recurring concern surrounding semiconductor stocks is whether current AI spending levels can be sustained or whether the industry is experiencing another temporary investment boom that could eventually lead to oversupply.
The contracts suggest that major customers are making multiyear commitments rather than simply responding to short-term demand spikes. RBC analysts said the agreements increase confidence that the current memory upcycle has further room to run.
“Our base case is for the current upcycle to continue through 2027, and SCAs give us added conviction regarding sustainability. We raise estimates, raise PT, and reiterate Outperform,” the firm wrote following the earnings release.
As AI models become larger and more computationally intensive, memory is evolving from a supporting component into a strategic asset. The industry’s focus is increasingly moving beyond processors toward the broader ecosystem required to power AI systems, including memory, networking equipment, advanced packaging, and data-center infrastructure.
That shift has benefited a relatively small group of suppliers capable of producing advanced memory at scale. For Micron, the combination of soaring AI demand, constrained industry supply, rising memory prices, and long-term customer commitments has created one of the strongest operating environments in the company’s history.
The latest earnings suggest that, at least for now, the AI spending boom remains firmly intact, with memory suppliers occupying a central position in one of the most significant technology investment cycles in decades.





