Micron got a double shot of good news on Monday. A bullish note from KeyBanc Capital and a blockbuster profit report from rival Samsung both pushed MU higher in trading.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
KeyBanc analyst John Vinh pointed to continued strength in memory pricing and sustained demand tied to AI infrastructure. He suggested earnings momentum could carry into future quarters.
Samsung’s results added fuel to the fire. The South Korean chipmaker said operating profit likely hit 57.200 trillion won — roughly $37.91 billion — in Q1 2026. That’s more than eight times what it reported in the same quarter a year ago.
Samsung’s revenue jumped 68% as well. While the company didn’t break down the numbers, analysts widely attribute the surge to its memory chip business, specifically High Bandwidth Memory.
HBM chips are the backbone of modern AI hardware. Nvidia and other AI chipmakers need them to run their most powerful systems, and right now, demand is outpacing supply.
Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron are all racing to qualify their HBM4 chips for Nvidia’s next-generation Rubin platform. Samsung said in February it became the first to mass produce HBM4 chips.
KeyBanc’s Vinh noted that SK Hynix and Micron are working through “minor issues” in the qualification process but expects all three to eventually qualify. His reasoning: there simply isn’t enough HBM4 capacity from Samsung alone to meet Rubin’s demands.
Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra has said the company plans to ramp up HBM4 production in Q2 2026.
MU hasn’t had a smooth ride lately. Eleven days ago, the stock dropped 7.2% after Google unveiled its TurboQuant algorithm, a tool designed to reduce memory requirements for AI models.
The market read that as a potential long-term threat to memory demand. Sandisk fell as much as 8% on the same news.
There’s also the matter of SK Hynix reportedly eyeing a $14 billion U.S. listing, which could add more competitive supply pressure down the line.
Despite Monday’s gain, MU sits 17.9% below its 52-week high of $461.73, set in March 2026.
The stock is up 20.1% since the start of the year. STMicroelectronics, which works with Samsung on semiconductor technology, rose 6% in European trading on the back of Samsung’s results.
Other chip stocks caught a lift too, with SK Hynix rising 3.39% and Samsung itself up 1.76%.
Micron had been down 0.7% in premarket before reversing course during the session.
The post Micron (MU) Stock Jumps on Analyst Upgrade — And Samsung Just Made the Bull Case Stronger appeared first on CoinCentral.

