Micron Technology (MU) just picked up another vote of confidence from Wall Street. Cantor Fitzgerald analyst C.J. Muse raised his price target on the stock to $2,000 from $1,500 on Monday.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
He kept his Buy rating in place. The move was part of a broader round of price target hikes across the chip sector.
Cantor also raised targets on Marvell, AMD, Intel, and Lam Research that same day. The firm believes AI infrastructure spending will drive a multi-year semiconductor supercycle.
Cantor expects industry revenue to top $3.5 trillion by 2030. That’s the backdrop for its newfound optimism on Micron specifically.
The key driver behind Muse’s higher target is Micron’s strategic customer agreements, or SCAs. These deals lock customers into multi-year commitments.
Muse says up to 50% of Micron’s revenue could now sit under these agreements. That’s a meaningful chunk of the business protected from short-term swings.
The analyst believes this changes the pricing math for Micron going forward. He expects less volatility around quarter-end negotiations than in past memory cycles.
Muse also thinks the SCAs should support steadier margins over time. That’s a shift from the boom-bust pattern memory chips are known for.
It’s not just Cantor making this case. Phillip Securities analyst Yik Ban Chong also raised his Micron target, moving it to $1,870 from $530.
That’s a massive jump, and it came after Micron’s Q3 FY26 earnings report. The company posted what it called the strongest quarter in its history.
Chong expects the memory supply shortage to stick around past 2027. He thinks Micron will keep landing new agreements with both existing and new customers.
Wall Street’s overall view on Micron is firmly bullish right now. The stock carries a Strong Buy consensus rating from analysts.
That rating is built on 29 Buy calls against just one Hold. No analyst currently rates the stock a Sell.
The average price target sits at $1,556.79. That figure points to roughly 36% upside from current levels.
Cantor’s $2,000 target is the most aggressive number floating around. It’s well above the Street average and signals real conviction in Micron’s new contract structure.
The thesis hinges on memory chips staying tight for years, not quarters. If that holds, Micron’s locked-in deals could look like smart timing rather than luck.
For now, the analyst community is lining up behind the stock. The next test will be whether Micron keeps signing the kind of deals that justify these higher numbers.
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