June 11, 2026 ChainGPT

Micron’s AI-Driven HBM Boom Could Push MU to $1.5K+, but 2028 Supply Risk Looms

Micron’s AI-Driven HBM Boom Could Push MU to $1.5K+, but 2028 Supply Risk Looms
Micron’s run looks less like a short squeeze and more like a structural re-rating — and both Wall Street and algorithmic models are betting it keeps running for at least the next couple of years. Shares of Micron Technology (NASDAQ: MU) have surged to $891.88 (up ~182% since January 2026) and the company recently cleared a $1 trillion market cap. Analysts’ 2026–2028 scenarios stretch from near-term upside into the $1,500–$2,000 zone to a cyclical correction back toward the $517–$880 range, with outcomes hinging on High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM) supply dynamics and the pace of AI-driven data center buildouts. Why Wall Street is bullish in 2026 - Unusually tight HBM market: CEO Sanjay Mehrotra told investors on the Q1 FY2026 call that Micron has contracted out its entire calendar-2026 HBM allocation — including its leading HBM4 — and expects constraints “beyond calendar 2026.” That locked-in supply has customers signing multi-year deals. - Huge TAM expansion: Micron projects HBM’s total addressable market growing from roughly $35 billion in 2025 to about $100 billion by 2028 — roughly a 40% CAGR. - Big beat and momentum: Q2 FY2026 results topped expectations, and Micron said it set records across revenue, gross margin, EPS and free cash flow, calling memory a “strategic asset” in the AI era and pledging capital investment to meet demand. Analyst and algorithmic price targets (highlights) - Street targets: Cantor Fitzgerald $1,500; UBS $1,625; Susquehanna $1,750 (top of the Street). Morgan Stanley lifted its target to $1,050; Raymond James to $1,100. - Algorithmic forecasts: LongForecast’s model paints an aggressive path — MU at ~$975 in June 2026, $1,438 by December 2026 (a ~61% H2 gain), then climbing through 2027 (monthly model: $1,545 in Jan -> $2,319 in Apr -> peak near $3,682 in Nov 2027, before easing to ~$3,164 in Dec). - Why multiples could expand: Analysts see 2027 EPS around $103–$106. At today’s price that’s a forward P/E near 8.1x — low for a cyclical peak. Normalizing to a modest 15x pushes stock north of $1,500; more aggressive multiples imply targets around $2,000. Catalysts for the 2026–2027 run - Volume HBM4 production began in Q1 FY2026 for Nvidia’s Vera Rubin platform; HBM4e ramp is expected through 2027, supporting revenue and margin upside. - Continued data center AI deployments keep demand structural rather than purely cyclical, per management and many sell-side models. The 2028 inflection and cycle risk - New supply looming: Micron’s Idaho campus is expected to start production by mid-2027, and the massive New York campus (priced at ~$100 billion in investment) is slated for wafer output in H2 2028. When that capacity arrives, analysts anticipate pricing normalization. - Bear case: Morningstar warns memory cycles historically reverse sharply; it estimates a possible ~50% revenue contraction into 2029 and trailing P/E compression to roughly 3x–4.5x, which could push shares to about $517–$880 by end-2028. - Bull case: Algorithmic models like LongForecast keep MU in the $2,700–$3,200 range through mid-2028 before a gradual decline late in the year. What this means for traders (crypto-native take) - Scarcity and locked supply in HBM are the on-chain-like narrative here: committed allocation, multi-year contracts and a fast-growing TAM create a scarcity premium similar to tokenomics-driven rallies. - Volatility and cycle risk are real: upside could be dramatic through 2027, but new capacity and historical memory-cycle drops mean downside can be swift and deep by 2028 if demand normalizes. - Risk management matters: for traders used to crypto’s boom-bust, this is a classic cyclical semiconductor story — position sizing, stop discipline and scenario planning (bull/baseline/bear price paths) will be key. Bottom line Micron’s fundamentals — locked-in HBM supply, AI-driven demand, and recent record financials — support a credible path to $1,500+ over the next 12–24 months. But the next big question is how and when new fab capacity hits the market. If supply ramps faster than demand, the same structural story that fuels the rally could amplify the sell-off in 2028. For traders and investors, the potential returns are substantial, but so are the cycle risks. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news