Micron Technology (MU) stock surged 19.29% on Tuesday — adding $144.88 in a single session to close at $895.88 — after UBS analyst Timothy Arcuri more than tripled his 12-month price target from $535 to $1,625.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
Arcuri’s new target implies the stock could still climb another 85% from current levels.
The driver behind Arcuri’s upgrade is straightforward: Micron has struck long-term supply agreements with customers that carry fixed volume commitments running three to five years. That kind of arrangement was essentially unheard of in the memory chip world before AI demand reshaped the market.
These deals reduce the earnings volatility that has historically made Micron a tough stock to hold. Arcuri expects Micron to generate earnings per share of $117 to $155 over the next three years, and he’s using a 15x forward earnings multiple to arrive at his target.
At 7.6 times forward earnings, Micron is still cheap for a company at the center of the AI hardware buildout.
UBS wasn’t the only firm turning more bullish. Citigroup nearly doubled its price target on Micron last week, though its $840 target is already below where the stock is now trading. Analysts are having trouble keeping pace.
Mizuho analyst Vijay Rakesh — who ranks 5th among more than 12,268 analysts tracked by TipRanks, with a 92% success rate on MU and an average return of 178.93% per rating — reiterated his Outperform rating and $800 target after meeting with Micron’s CFO Mark Murphy and other senior executives.
Rakesh’s key takeaway: AI is driving memory demand the industry has never seen, and supply is not going to catch up any time soon.
He expects the memory market to stay undersupplied through 2026 and into 2027. That tightness supports both higher pricing and better margins across HBM, DRAM, and NAND.
On HBM specifically, Rakesh flagged that after a pricing reset in late 2025, HBM4 and HBM4e prices are expected to jump 70% to 100% in 2027. Complexity is rising, and that gives Micron pricing power that wasn’t there before.
Rakesh also pointed to a newer demand driver: agentic AI. This next wave of AI workloads increases the need for CPU-DRAM bandwidth, and Nvidia’s push into CPUs could add roughly 3,000 petabytes of new DRAM demand. That’s equivalent to about 6% of total global DRAM production — a meaningful tailwind.
It’s not just AI-linked memory that’s tight. Rakesh said key customers are short 30% to 50% in other memory categories, and he expects that shortage to persist well past 2026, keeping DRAM and NAND prices firm across the board.
Micron hit a $1 trillion market cap this week. Its 52-week range now spans from $92.22 to $916.80 — a range that tells the whole story.
Wall Street consensus sits at Strong Buy: 27 Buys and 3 Holds over the past three months.
The post Micron (MU) Stock: Why Analysts See 85% Upside From Here appeared first on CoinCentral.

