Micron Technology shares fell sharply in Monday trading, dropping about 6.4% as investors reassessed one of the most crowded trades in the artificial intelligence semiconductor boom.
The stock, which opened strong at $749.24, quickly reversed course and slid to an intraday low near $677.96 before stabilizing slightly above that level. The decline erased prior gains and reinforced growing volatility across the chip sector.
The move comes after months of strong momentum driven by tight supply in AI-linked memory chips. However, sentiment shifted as traders reacted to rising macro uncertainty, including higher Treasury yields and broader weakness in semiconductor equities.
A key driver behind the selloff is renewed uncertainty surrounding Samsung Electronics and its ongoing labor negotiations. The company and its union are preparing for further talks aimed at avoiding a large-scale strike that could involve tens of thousands of workers.
Reports suggest that if talks fail, an extended walkout could disrupt global memory chip production at a critical time for AI infrastructure demand.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
Samsung’s potential strike introduces a complex dynamic for Micron and its competitors. On one hand, reduced output from a major producer could tighten global supply and push memory prices higher. On the other hand, it increases uncertainty across the supply chain, making investors more cautious about near-term stability.
Market estimates have suggested that even a partial disruption could impact a meaningful share of global memory production, highlighting how sensitive pricing power has become in the AI era.
Micron’s decline was not an isolated event. Broader semiconductor stocks also came under pressure, with major names in the AI chip ecosystem moving lower. Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices, and Broadcom all posted losses during the same session, reflecting a coordinated pullback across high-growth technology names.
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index also slipped more than 2%, signaling that the weakness was sector-wide rather than company-specific. Analysts pointed to a mix of rising interest rates, profit-taking after strong year-to-date gains, and geopolitical uncertainty affecting global chip supply chains.
Higher yields in U.S. Treasury markets added further pressure, as investors reassessed valuations of fast-growing technology firms whose future earnings are more sensitive to discount rates.
Despite the pullback, Micron remains deeply embedded in the structural growth story around artificial intelligence. The company sits at the center of a global shortage in high-performance memory chips used in AI servers, data centers, and advanced computing systems. This supply-demand imbalance has been a major driver of earnings expectations and stock performance over the past year.
Micron’s latest financial guidance reflects this strength, with forecasts pointing to strong revenue and elevated gross margins driven by tight supply conditions. Analysts have continued to revise price targets higher in recent months, citing improving fundamentals and sustained AI infrastructure spending from major technology companies.
However, the current market reaction shows that even strong fundamentals are not enough to shield the stock from macro and geopolitical risks.
The post Micron (MU) Stock; Drops Nearly 6% as Samsung Strike Fears Test AI Memory Supply Boom appeared first on CoinCentral.


